[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: Current events--too rhetorical?
Perhaps it's my Burkean tendencies, but I teach my students that there is a rhetoric of the body, that minds are in bodies, that mind/body are not separate but one. I submit that some of us run into burning towers to bring out the endangered while others rush into ash-filled streets to help those who have stumbled, and that this is a powerful statement of the body. Rushing in and working to save others is no less a rhetoric than is looking on from a distance through a camera lens and struggling to verbalize the events. Were I in any condition to distance myself from the week's events, I might want to ask complicated questions about the rhetoric of those photojournalists who lied, saying they were rescue workers, to gain admission to "ground zero" and get exclusive footage. Were they serving a higher cause? Or betraying a trust? This is not merely a policy question for a child of Vientam's lies... I am Woodstock's little sister, I trust no report given by the suits in times of strife. And yet I understand the wrongness of lying to rescue coordinators and possibly endangering others with reckless behavior. At this stage, my mind is so slowly sifting, and I am still working out why it is that I understand why we zoom the president off to safety, and then listen to the audio feed when he's in a position to give a (rhetorical) statement. And yet, the rhetoric of zoom has somehow stabbed me, I feel struck from behind, I did not like that the leader went zoom, while the workers ran into the fire. I know, I do know it is a good s.o.p., and that we don't want the figureheads taken down in a crisis. Yet the statement made by the physical fact of a president -- our fearless leader -- whisking overhead in a jet with two flanking F-16's was no less rhetorical than the hand of a young man, who reached down to an older man sitting on a curb, overcome and choking. While they staggered together, helping each other out of the soot and debris, while the deafening crash of falling concrete... while bodies on the ground moved in and out, to escape, to save, to guide or just to stare ... the ones zooming overhead composed hollow words (the safest kind) and put on their TV makeup, because their job was to explain the inexplicable. Distance is an illusion. CeeJ jeney@mwsc.edu
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