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Symbols
of Destruction
Elemer
Hankiss, Director, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Institute
of Sociology
The
Shock
Since the assassination of President Kennedy nothing has
shocked the western world, and not only the USA, more than
the terror attack of 11 September.
On the one hand, this is understandable. We are citizens
of the same world, heirs of the same civilization, and myriad
human relations, institutional contacts, common values and
interests, ventures and projects bind us closely and inseparably
together. But, on the other hand, the intensity of the shock
outside the US is something that is worth a closer scrutiny.
Beyond the deep-felt sorrow for those innocent people who
lost their lives, and the indignation over the brutality
of the attack, people were shaken in their very existence
and uncertainty and fear filled their hearts. The question
is: Why? There are a few obvious, and some less obvious
answers.
Centrum mundi
In the last few decades America has undoubtedly become the
center of the world; both in the literal and the symbolic
sense of the word.
Let's take the White House as an example. It has become
physically the center of world political power. The most
important political decisions are being made inside its
walls. But, at the same time, the building itself -- with
its white walls, serene proportions, classical Greek tympanum
and colonnade -- has become the symbol of a power that radiates
not only strength but also peace, freedom, and harmony.
This rich and positive symbolism has been daily reinforced
by the media broadcasting throughout the world pictures
of this resplendent mansion, the opulent elegance of the
Oval Room, the amazing professionalism and impeccable white
shirts of the president's men, the beautiful green lawns
with a cheerful and self-confident president and his playful
dog nimbly stepping out of the helicopter as if he were
a Greek God alighting from Olympus.
And the White House has been only one of these real-world
plus symbolic centers of the world in America. One might
list some of these centers in the following way.
USA
THE CENTER OF THE WORLD
| The
World Trade Center |
Symbol
of globalization, and the glory of the Western World
|
| Wall
Street |
Real
and symbolic center of global financial power
|
| The
White House |
Global
center of political power
|
| The
Pentagon |
Global
center and symbol of military power
|
| Silicon
Valley |
Center
and symbol of digital power and technical development
|
| Harvard,
Yale |
Global
centers of knowledge Stanford and scientific research
|
| CNN |
Global
center and source of information. Only those things really
happen in the world that are broadcast by CNN
|
| Hollywood |
Center
of contemporary myths and divinities
|
| San
Francisco |
Center
of "flower power"
|
| California |
Center
of the new lifestyle and joy of life
|
| US
$ |
The global symbol of wealth and power |
September 11 has shattered almost all of
these symbols. The World Trade Center physically collapsed
and its symbolic message, the triumph of the western world,
has been impaired. The Pentagon was seriously hit, and the
symbolic invincibility of America's military power has had
to be quickly reinforced by a blazing victory in Afghanistan.
Wall Street and Silicon Valley trembled. CNN faltered, it
lost -- even if only for a few days or weeks -- its grip
on events, and suddenly the pictures of a new television
company, al- Jazira, emerging from nowhere, filled the screens
around the world. The colors of the "flower power" grew
pale. Anxiety crept into the joy of life of California.
Hollywood suddenly lost its self-confidence and was not
sure if it could go on broadcasting the same illusions,
myths, and pictures of virtual terror as before.
America had become a conscious and unconscious, emotional
and cognitive reference point for most of the people living
in the western world. Beyond being the center of power,
wealth, information, it was also the source of a score of
fundamental values: freedom, entrepreneurial spirit, the
apotheosis of the human personality, new ideas and concepts,
new movements, lifestyles, hope. And now, suddenly, this
symbolic axis of our world faltered and a fearful vacuum
emerged, even if only for some weeks or months, at the center
of the world. And our hearts sank. Apparently we need a
fixed point in the world to which we may cling. America
has been able to function as this Archimedean point in spite
of all its inner contradictions and the questions marks
around its role in the world. Losing this anchoring point
has been a fearful experience for hundreds of millions of
people in the western world.1
But in spite of the upsetting impact of this loss, it does
not wholly explain the intensity of the shock people suffered
on September 11. Further factors, too, must have played
a role in it
Deep structures
This act of terror may have hit some of the deepest chords
in our minds and souls. A Freud, a Jung, a Rank, a Roheim,
an Eliade, a Campbell would probably argue that the events
of September 11 mobilized in our subconscious atavistic
fears or archetypal, mythic, symbolic energies and the explosion
of these energies may have amplified the shock to terrifying
proportions.
Let me refer to some phenomena that may support this sort
of interpretation.
The spectacle. The spectacle itself was already horrendous.
Who could ever forget the sight of the airplane in the sky
of New York, taking an elegant bend and then, suddenly,
smashing into the tower and exploding in a fireball. It
was stupefying to see this fearful metamorphosis of a beautiful,
silver airplane, symbol of peace, freedom, and joy into
an awful and destructive weapon. The metamorphosis of a
dove of peace into a predator; the transubstantiation of
a silvery angel into a fiery demon.
Apocalypse. The destruction was almost apocalyptic.
The avenging angel swooping down on our world flashed up
pictures of the Revelation of St. John the Divine,
or of the Greek goddess, Nemesis.
Apocalypse, Now. In our virtual world created by
the media we have already witnessed, many times, the death
of hundreds and thousands of people. Think of the newsreels
and TV news showing the bombardment of cities, houses ablaze
and collapsing, tanks and trucks hit by rockets and their
crew stumbling out burning. But there has ever been a time
lag. A couple of hours, days, months between the event and
the moment we were watching them, often in a bowdlerized
version, on the screen. September 11 was perhaps the first
time that we faced death "live"; "in real time". We were
watching as thousands of women and men fell, helpless, into
their death.
The irruption of the irrational. The impossible and
unimaginable happened under our very eyes. The irrational
broke into our world of Cartesian, Kantian rationality.
The impact may prove to be as destructive as was that of
the earthquake of Lisbon in 1755, which -- according to
the testimony of Voltaire - irreparably shook the faith
of the Enlightenment in a harmonious and rational universe.
The negative miracle. In the moments of the crash,
we were shocked by the sight of a horrendous "negative miracle".
Instead of a miraculous act of healing or creation, we witnessed
an infernal miracle of destruction. In the mythic world
of Hollywood, the American hero was able to victoriously
achieve the "Mission Impossible". It was a shock to see
now that it was our adversaries who successfully accomplished
the impossible.
The Tower of Babel. An obvious parallel. The collapse
of the two sky-high towers, symbols of the greatness of
human achievements, may have invoked in many people's minds
the myth of the Tower of Babel, the destruction of which
was, according to the Old Testament, God's punishment for
humankind's divine ambitions.2
Icarus. Modern American civilization developed an
unprecedented cult of the human personality, who - by the
help of will power, achievement orientation, self-confidence,
positive thinking, a faith in the world and human opportunities,
competition, professionalism, courage - is able to overcome
all the difficulties, bring peace, freedom, well-being to
the peoples of the world. The last few decades were those
of the apotheosis of the human personality, soaring into
unprecedented heights. And now, on September 11, nothing
and nobody could save this victorious Icarus from falling
into the depths of destruction.
The Wheel of Fortune. Another myth, and emblem, of
the transience of human wealth, power and glory. The events
of September 11 may have invoked this terrifying vision
of the fall of human beings from the height of glory and
success into the depths of annihilation and non-being. A
kindred motif, the Fall of Princes, may also have
contributed to the shocking effect of the sight of the collapsing
towers. It was a stock-in-trade motif in the late Middle
Ages, and the Renaissance, but broadsides and highbrow literary
works (pulp magazines and Shakespeare's tragedies, for instance)
have kept it alive in popular imagination.
Arrows and spears. The victims of September 11 are
mourned as martyrs. Martyrdom may be extended, symbolically
to the towers themselves. Several people I have talked to
mentioned the martyrdom of St. Sebastian, imprinted on our
minds by myriad pictures, icons, frescoes, who, bound to
a pole, was pierced by deadly arrows as the towers were
run through by the lethal arrows of the airplanes.
Axis mundi. We know from Mircea Eliade
and others that high mountains, trees, towers appear in
the mythic imagination of people as axes mundi, i.e.
as "axes" that connect the profane world with the realm
of the divine, the immanent with the transcendental, humankind
with God. The two planes broke this axis, this connection
between humankind and the sphere of the divine and self-apotheosis.
The Tablets of Moses. Would it be too farfetched
to say that the two towers, standing and rising upright,
as symbols of the triumph and glory of the western world,
may have had an at least vague resemblance to the two tablets
of Moses, with the fundamental principles of a new civilization
carved on them?
Horror vacui. When the clouds of dust started
to settle, it was a painful shock to see the absurd gap,
the vacuum, the absence of something that had been there
a couple of minutes before, in its full power and reality.
We were staring into the invisible depths of non-existence,
the existentialists' Néant. With the so-called stop-trick,
filmmakers can make objects and persons disappear from a
scene in a trice but in reality we have never witnessed
this sudden annihilation of life.
Satan. The minds of contemporary people are far less
exempt from mythic elements than we would like to believe
in our rational moments. The apparition of Satan, who with
his black wings (caftan) spread over the towers, darkened
the sky and the universe, seems to have been a rather common
experience of those who witnessed the attack. In a picture
that got great publicity around the world and showed the
infernal flames and smoke of the explosion, lots of people
discovered the outlines of Satan's face.
Good and Evil. The horrendous spectacle may have
rekindled in many people's minds the Manichean vision of
the battle of Good and Evil, Light and Darkness, the forces
of creation and destruction. The Judeo-Christian tradition
has ever fought this dualistic vision but it overwhelmed
people's and communities' imagination again and again, in
times of conflict and crisis. After the end of the Cold
War, we hoped that we got rid of this dangerous and destructive
dualism forever. But in the aftermath of September 11 it
came back with a vengeance.
The sacrilege. In the Manichean vision people identify
themselves with the Good, and their adversaries with Evil.
They are likely to believe that their truth is the absolute
and only truth in the world, and their adversaries' convictions
are dangerous errors and machinations. Una est Veritas.
Questioning this Truth, let alone trying to destroy it,
is a horrendous sacrilege.
Death, triumphant. With a certain degree of exaggeration
one could say that, together with the towers, the illusion
of immortality collapsed as well on September 11. In what
sense? We, people living in our contemporary consumer civilization,
believe, and want to believe, so strongly in the power of
the human being to solve the problems of life that we have
almost come to believe that even the ultimate problem of
human existence, mortality, can be solved. Or, at least,
it can and should be eliminated from human consciousness.
Several scholars have argued that the "denial of death"
is one of the main characteristics of citizens of contemporary
western civilization, the civilization of consumption.3
The cult of youth, the joy of life, success, wealth, the
exclusion of death from civilized, politically correct conversation,
the tactful separation of the elderly from the world of
the young, the teeming of angels, spirits, time travelers,
those returned from the land of death on the TV screen,
the American soldier who must win the war without letting
himself get killed: it is beyond doubt that - at least on
the surface -- our contemporary civilization turns much
less about the idea of mortality and death than traditional
European civilization (and most other traditional civilizations)
have ever done.
And on September 11, we were suddenly and rudely confronted
with the fragility of human life. And we could not avert
our eyes from the terrible sight. We could not ignore any
more the unacceptable fact of death. Even if only temporarily,
death has moved into our hearts.
All these may have been among the factors that have made
September 11 the day of the symbols of destruction.
Global responses
It would be important to know whether or not the drama of
September 11 was so rich in symbolic and mythic elements
also in the Islamic world. What we know is that in the world
of Islam visual representation plays a much smaller role
than in the Christian tradition. And, as a consequence,
the events of September 11 may have triggered off much less
visual associations than in the imagination of people in
the West. One could also say that in the world of Islam
there were relatively less dramatic events and visions;
there is no Apocalypse in the Koran; Satan has played a
much less picturesque role than in the Judeo-Christian tradition.
The Manichean vision of the battle of Good and Evil, which
has emerged again and again in Judeo-Christianism, is, if
not absent, much less pronounced in the Islam.
It is true, though, that in the twentieth century, and especially
since the Algerian, Israeli-Palestinian and other conflicts,
anti-western feelings have escalated. But they mostly stayed
in the realm of frustrations, anger, and protest against
exploitation and injustice. The West has been mythicized
into the embodiment of transcendental Evil only within certain
extremist groups of fundamentalists. If, in the mythic imagination
of people in the West, bin Laden was quickly and easily
identified with a vengeful Satan, the majority of Moslems
presumably considered the events of September 11 - with
much less visual or symbolic drama - simply as the sign
of Allah's wrath.
It would be important to know more also about the emotional
and symbolic impact of the events of September 11 in the
other communities of the world. How did people in India,
China, South-America, Africa, Russia respond to it; intellectually
and emotionally? Was the impact amplified, or tempered and
muffled by the various traditional mythic and symbolic heritages?
What was, and what is the balance between various responses
to the tragic events in the various communities: Empathy
and condolence? Aversion, gloating, satisfaction? Anxiety
and fear? Or?
If the answers were known, if the various responses could
be mapped, this would help a lot people in the west locate
themselves in a global public sphere. It would help them
better to see their global image(s); to rethink the global
role they play; better to develop their norms of global
behavior.
Anyway, are we learning a new language, the
symbolic language of the civilization of consumption? Or
should we rather say that we are already learning the language
of a coming "Post-Consumer Civilization"?
Footnotes
1 It would be extremely important to analyze the
cognitive, emotional, and symbolic impact of the events of
September 11 also on those who are strongly critical of America's
role in the globalizing world (accusing America of "imperialism",
"neo-colonialism", 'wasting of resources", "growing global
inequality", "metropolitan ghettos", "crime and drug problems",
etc.) but this should be the subject of a series of other
studies. Let me only mention here that even those who loathe
America have been turning around it, have related themselves
to it, have defined themselves in their opposition to it.
A third group to be studied would be people in the developing
world. The picture must be extremely complex. There certainly
are a great many people for whom America seems to be one of
the major sources of their misery and suffering (forgetting
sometimes that their own feudal and despotic lords may be
an even more important source). And there certainly are many
people for whom America is, for all it ambiguity, the last
glimmer of hope in a hopeless world. A special group would
be the Islamic world, with its own deep divisions. I shall
come back to it later in this paper.
2 The destruction of the Bastille belongs to a
different kind of symbolism.
3 The expression comes from Ernest Becker's The
Denial of Death (New York: The Free Press, 1973). He applied
this concept only to people in America.
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