Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Newspapers commemorate 11 September: A cross-cultural investigation
View through CrossRef
On 12 September 2001, as Hans-Peter Feldmann documented in his 2002 installation 9/12 Front Page, the front pages of newspapers from 151 countries showed similar photographs of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center. Despite this cross-cultural agreement on the most salient image at the time, in the decade since, distinct visual narratives of 9/11 have emerged in newspaper anniversary journalism. This paper examines how The New York Times (US) and Le Monde (France) have used photographs, advertisements, and editorial cartoons in 9/11 anniversary journalism. Using theories of collective memory and photography, along with demographic data of 9/11 victims, I examine how photographic representations of the victims have changed, offering a less complex story of events. I document the images that have been recirculated and discuss why the emergence of visual icons matters to our collective memory of 9/11. And I explore how the papers’ proximity to the events influenced their visual anniversary journalism.
Title: Newspapers commemorate 11 September: A cross-cultural investigation
Description:
On 12 September 2001, as Hans-Peter Feldmann documented in his 2002 installation 9/12 Front Page, the front pages of newspapers from 151 countries showed similar photographs of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center.
Despite this cross-cultural agreement on the most salient image at the time, in the decade since, distinct visual narratives of 9/11 have emerged in newspaper anniversary journalism.
This paper examines how The New York Times (US) and Le Monde (France) have used photographs, advertisements, and editorial cartoons in 9/11 anniversary journalism.
Using theories of collective memory and photography, along with demographic data of 9/11 victims, I examine how photographic representations of the victims have changed, offering a less complex story of events.
I document the images that have been recirculated and discuss why the emergence of visual icons matters to our collective memory of 9/11.
And I explore how the papers’ proximity to the events influenced their visual anniversary journalism.
Related Results
Cross-cultural Encounters in Urban Festivals: Between Liberation and Domination
Cross-cultural Encounters in Urban Festivals: Between Liberation and Domination
This paper is part of a wider research project on Paradoxical Spaces: Encountering the Other in Public Space that explores how cultural difference is practiced and negotiated in di...
The Riverside Roads of Culture as a Tool for the Development of Aitoloakarnania
The Riverside Roads of Culture as a Tool for the Development of Aitoloakarnania
Cultural routes are a well-established development tool to highlight and promote a region’s cultural and environmental reserve, as well as having a positive impact on a region’s so...
The Austronesian Game Taxonomy: A cross-cultural dataset of historical games
The Austronesian Game Taxonomy: A cross-cultural dataset of historical games
AbstractHumans in most cultures around the world play rule-based games, yet research on the content and structure of these games is limited. Previous studies investigating rule-bas...
Negotiating Cultural Identity in The Inheritance of Loss
Negotiating Cultural Identity in The Inheritance of Loss
This paper seeks to explore three modes of cultural identification presented in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss. With three intersecting plotlines, the novel focuses on three...
Machiavelli Meets Michelangelo
Machiavelli Meets Michelangelo
This article examines newspaper coverage of the arts in Singapore to consider the role of the island state’s newspapers in the development and documentation of Singapore’s growing ...
What Crowdsourcing Can Offer to Cross-Cultural Psychological Science
What Crowdsourcing Can Offer to Cross-Cultural Psychological Science
Although the benefits of crowdsourcing research models have been outlined elsewhere, very little attention has been paid to the application of these models to cross-cultural behavi...
New Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Marriage Transactions
New Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Marriage Transactions
This article refines and extends previous cross-cultural research on marriage transactions (e.g., bride wealth, dowry). The authors begin by expanding the standard cross-cultural t...
The Rubberbandits’ Guide to Satire: Absurdism and Social Commentary in a Cross-Media Environment
The Rubberbandits’ Guide to Satire: Absurdism and Social Commentary in a Cross-Media Environment
This paper argues that through an engagement with cross-media hybridity, Irish comedy duo The Rubberbandits have established a dynamic cross-media forum that aims to restore the Ir...