Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

World Suffering and Quality of LifeDistant Suffering and the Mediation of Humanitarian Disaster

World Suffering and Quality of Life: Distant Suffering and the Mediation of Humanitarian Disaster [Most of today’s humanitarian catastrophes are taking place in countries of the so-called Global South. At the same time, countries in that part of the world are often among those least likely to be visited by those living in the West. In this configuration, what most of Western audiences know about and how they relate to victims of large-scale humanitarian disaster is almost exclusively derived – directly or indirectly – from various media accounts. Not surprisingly, media scholars have thus recently shown a growing interest in theorizing Western spectatorship of mediated distant suffering. The goal of this chapter is to offer a conceptual contribution to this debate by discussing four dimensions in the representation of distant suffering that appear to be crucial in facilitating or foreclosing engagement in spectators that typically are very much removed – geographically and psychologically – from the material reality of disaster. Distance encompasses various ways in which representation renders humanitarian crises as distant or as proximate to the audiences. Actuality in the representation of humanitarian crises describes the extent in which stories of human suffering are told as actual and consequential. Scale refers to the depiction of suffering as that of single individuals or of large groups. Relievability highlights the significance of presenting suffering as something that can mitigated in the present and/or prevented in the future. We conclude the chapter by discussing contemporary changes in the media landscape and avenues for future research based on our framework.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

World Suffering and Quality of LifeDistant Suffering and the Mediation of Humanitarian Disaster

Part of the Social Indicators Research Series Book Series (volume 56)
Editors: Anderson, Ronald E.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/springer-journals/world-suffering-and-quality-of-life-distant-suffering-and-the-g6uX8THJYu

References (68)

Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Copyright
© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2015
ISBN
978-94-017-9669-9
Pages
75 –87
DOI
10.1007/978-94-017-9670-5_6
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[Most of today’s humanitarian catastrophes are taking place in countries of the so-called Global South. At the same time, countries in that part of the world are often among those least likely to be visited by those living in the West. In this configuration, what most of Western audiences know about and how they relate to victims of large-scale humanitarian disaster is almost exclusively derived – directly or indirectly – from various media accounts. Not surprisingly, media scholars have thus recently shown a growing interest in theorizing Western spectatorship of mediated distant suffering. The goal of this chapter is to offer a conceptual contribution to this debate by discussing four dimensions in the representation of distant suffering that appear to be crucial in facilitating or foreclosing engagement in spectators that typically are very much removed – geographically and psychologically – from the material reality of disaster. Distance encompasses various ways in which representation renders humanitarian crises as distant or as proximate to the audiences. Actuality in the representation of humanitarian crises describes the extent in which stories of human suffering are told as actual and consequential. Scale refers to the depiction of suffering as that of single individuals or of large groups. Relievability highlights the significance of presenting suffering as something that can mitigated in the present and/or prevented in the future. We conclude the chapter by discussing contemporary changes in the media landscape and avenues for future research based on our framework.]

Published: Jan 7, 2014

Keywords: Distant suffering; Representation of disaster; Empathy; Compassion; Moral psychology

There are no references for this article.