Historical Origins of Human Rights - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Historical Origins of Human Rights

Description:

... opening with a horrific scene of slave torture in the American South. ... Sontag: 'Being a spectator of calamities taking place in another country is a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:80
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: alisab
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Historical Origins of Human Rights


1
Historical Origins of Human Rights
  • Lecture 6
  • Far-Flung Strangers (in Pictures)
  • September 22, 2005

2
outline
  • introduction
  • the novelty of distance
  • close and personal v. faraway and produced?
  • digression history of representations
  • technologies of producing compassion
  • the history of images
  • image and emotion
  • photography
  • compassion fatigue
  • sentimentalism and sensationalism
  • sentimentalism and sadism
  • conclusion

3
introduction
  • human rights as a culture
  • a step-by-step argument
  • how do subjects connect to objects?

4
the novelty of distance
  • the Chinese mandarin problem
  • identification is harder and harder to the extent
    people are not like you (as Carlo Ginzburg
    notes, a point Aristotle made long ago)
  • David Hume if theres any natural pity, its for
    people and problems that are close rather than
    faraway Men are principally concernd about
    those objects, which are not much removd either
    in space or time leaving what is afar off to
    the care of chance and fortune. The breaking of
    a mirror gives us more concern when at home, than
    the burning of a house, when abroad, and some
    hundred leagues distant.
  •  Adam Smith follows him Let us suppose that the
    great empire of China, with all its myriads of
    inhabitants, was suddenly swallowed up by an
    earthquake, and let us consider how a man of
    humanity in Europe, who had no sort of connexion
    with that part of the world, would be affected
    upon receiving intelligence of this dreadful
    calamity. If he was to lose his little finger
    to-morrow, he would not sleep to-night but,
    provided he never saw them, he will snore with
    the most profound security over the ruin of a
    hundred millions of his brethren, and the
    destruction of that immense multitude seems
    plainly an object less interesting to him, than
    this paltry misfortune of his own.

5
two perspectives on distance
  • caring about the distant as innate human
    imperative
  • caring a moral attribute that needs to be
    produced
  •  
  • key point to take from Ginzburgs article the
    rise of moral interest in the anonymous and
    distant (central to the humanitarian movement,
    since the it presupposes caring about harmed
    strangers) occurred in history
  • why did it occur?
  •  one potential explanation the rise of actual
    implication in others lives
  • but there is actual implication without awareness
    or caring
  • it might coincide with the rise of moral
    indifference about them
  • to be indifferent you have to be related
  • what if the rise of caring is just a footnote to
    the rise of indifference?
  • thats to say, the rise of relations to distant
    people allowed both new kinds of indifference to
    suffering and the rise of moral concern about
    those suffering anonymous and distantly

6
close and authentic v. faraway and produced?
  • See Luc Boltanski, Distant Suffering
  • for the sentimentalists, ALL identification
    required imagination
  • the role of the imagination in sympathy By the
    imagination we place ourselves in his situation,
    we conceive ourselves enduring all the same
    torments, we enter as it were into this body, and
    become in some measure the same person with him,
    and then form some idea of his sensations His
    agonies, when they are thus brought home to
    ourselves, when we have thus adopted and made
    them our own, begin at last to affect us, and we
    then tremble and shudder at the thought of what
    he feels (Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments).
  • pity and compassion as the emotion we feel for
    the misery of others, when we either see it, or
    are made to conceive it in a very lively manner
    (Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments).
  • note importance of seeing (as Diderot already
    suggests in his Letter on the Blind, in which he
    doubted that blind men pity as much)
  • if there is a difference, it is between
    identification made by oneself and one made by
    use of technology
  • technologies to see far away

7
digression history of representations
  • public world of images variable across space and
    in time
  • history of representations studies this
    variability

8
technologies of allowing compassion to connect
  • Susan Sontag on images of suffering The
    practice of representing atrocious suffering as
    something to be deplored, and, if possible,
    stopped, enters the history of images with a
    specific subject the sufferings endured by a
    civilian population at the hands of a victorious
    army on a rampage.

9
The History of Images
  • early examples iconography/painting
  • Hendrik Goltzius, The Dragon Devouring the
    Companions of Cadmus (1588)
  • Jacques Callot, Les Misères et malheurs de la
    guerre Misery and Disaster of War (1633)
  • Francisco Goya, Los Desastres de la Guerra
    Disasters of War (1810-1820, first publ. 1863)
  • relation between images of war and images of
    poverty follows larger relation between
    humanitarian responses to war and humanitarian
    responses to other disasters (including poverty)

10
Goltzius
11
recruitment
12
scenes of pillage
13
plundering a large farmhouse
14
plunder/burning of village
15
attack on a coach
16
strappado
17
hanging
18
wheel
19
peasants revenge
20
image and emotion
  • three (mutually exclusive) views about the
    relation between images of suffering and culture
    of humanitarianism
  • the priority of the emotion humanitarianism is
    natural and gives rise to the need to document
    suffering as technology allows. comparison I
    always wanted the product (the Lexus) and the
    image simply responded to this emotion (informing
    me where to get it, information about it, etc.)
  • the interdependence of image and emotion
    humanitarianism is brought about by the
    documentation of suffering, but only in the sense
    that it awakens a dormant faculty. comparison I
    may not have known I wanted the product (the
    Lexus) until shown a picture, but the emotion
    pre-exists the picture and is only activated by
    it
  • the priority of the image the emotion doesnt
    exist until the image brings it about.
    comparison I did not want the product (the
    Lexus) until the image made me want it
  • which one is right?

21
photography
  • photography a revolutionary breakthrough?
  • is there an essential relationship between
    humanitarianism and photography?
  • could humanitarianism have developed the same way
    without photography?
  • the CNN effect
  • what are the characteristics of photography that
    make it so important in the history of
    humanitarianism?

22
compassion fatigue
  • the moral sentiments could become dulled through
    excessive exposure
  • Susan Sontag from On Photography to Regarding
    the Pain of Others In the end, such images just
    make us a little less able to feel, to have our
    conscience pricked.
  • Bishop Joseph Butler emotion may diminish, but
    the hope is that in the meantime practice of
    caring for others becomes habit Let a man set
    himself to attend to, inquire out, and relieve
    distressed persons, and he cannot but grow less
    and less sensibly affected with the various
    miseries of life, with which he must become
    acquainted when yet, at the time, benevolence,
    considered not as a passion, but as a practical
    principle of action will strengthen and whilst
    he passively compassionates the distressed less,
    he will acquire a greater aptitude actively to
    assist and befriend them.
  • is education for compassion self-defeating?
  •  if not, is education for compassion a temporary
    problem or a permanent need?

23
sentimentalism and sensationalism
  • sympathy could become an end in itself, without
    taking the next step to the alleviation of
    suffering
  • When we read of torments, wounds, deaths, and
    the like dismal accidents, our pleasure does not
    flow so properly from the grief which such
    melancholy description gives us, as from the
    secret comparison which we make between ourselves
    and the person who suffers. Such representations
    teach us to set a just value upon our own
    condition, and make us prize our good fortune,
    which exempts us from like the like calamities
    (The Spectator, 1712).
  • from being a spectator to being a voyeur

24
spectacle v. structure
  • representations of physical cruelty (torture,
    slavery and war) as opposed to what?
  • does humanitarianism have a bias for spectacular
    versus structural suffering (whether the latter
    is embodied or not)?

25
sentimentalism and sadism
  • emergence of Gothic fiction and Romantic agony
  • the constant depiction of suffering in order to
    suggest its alleviation also created people who
    reveled in it.
  • William Wordsworth degrading thirst after
    outrageous stimulation
  • far from dulling the sentiments, the
    representation of pain (notably in visual form)
    could whet ones appetite for it
  • Karen Halttunen Humanitarian reformers were
    caught in a contradiction largely of their own
    making. To around popular opposition to the evil
    practices they sought to eradicate, they deemed
    it necessary to display those practices in all
    their horror. But, by their own line of
    argument, viewing the spectacle of suffering
    could inflict terrible moral damage on the
    spectator, turning him or her into a savage
    with an atrocious passion for cruelty.
    Humanitarian reform was a major cultural vehicle
    for the growing unacceptability of pain it was
    also, inescapably, an expression and even a
    demonstration of the new obscenity of pain.
  • historians also suggest that it was in this
    period of sentiment that pornography emerged as a
    genre, and involved novel scenes of stimulating
    pain

26
sadism contd
  • Marquis de Sade (1740-1814) Cruelty, very far
    from being a vice, is the first sentiment Nature
    injects in us all. The infant breaks his toy,
    bites his nurse's breast, strangles his canary
    long before he is able to reason cruelty is
    stamped in animals, in whom, as I think I have
    said, Nature's laws are more emphatically to be
    read than in ourselves cruelty exists amongst
    savages, so much nearer to Nature than civilized
    men are absurd then to maintain cruelty is a
    consequence of depravity. Cruelty is simply the
    energy in a man civilization has not yet
    altogether corrupted therefore it is a virtue,
    not a vice.
  • Choderlos de Laclos, Les Liaisons dangereuses
    (1782)
  • Michel Foucault Sadism is not a name finally
    given to a practice as old as Eros it is a
    massive cultural fact which appeared precisely at
    the end of the eighteenth century.
  • The term Sadism comes only from the end of the
    nineteenth-century, coined by Richard von
    Krafft-Ebing. One of the cases that led him to
    the coinage involved a person whose first
    experience of sexual excitement at puberty came
    as a result of reading Uncle Toms Cabin, which
    is of course one of the great monuments of
    humanitarian propaganda, opening with a horrific
    scene of slave torture in the American South.

27
conclusion
  • Sontag Being a spectator of calamities taking
    place in another country is a quintessential
    modern experience.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com