Violence in Text, Film, and Pictures
It is the “responsibility”
of the free press to provide as much non-filtered information as possible, specifically
regarding violent images, without consideration of whether the people will care
for the information, or what they will think of it (Source B).
I specifically want to
talk about one of my body paragraphs from the essay. I’m not going to write the
body paragraph here but explain the key points that I hopefully conveyed in the
actual essay. Before reading Maus, we read a comic which explained the co-dependence
of images and text. There were varying levels, but nonetheless, both images and
text could represent the same idea but offer an even greater understanding to
the reader if used together in the appropriate manner. Thus, if a violent image
depicts something, then text could do the exact same. When we read The Things
They Carried, there were no images, yet all the gory visuals that could
have been given to the audience in the form pictures were rather given by textual
descriptions. So is violent text banned? Not really. Yes, some text is banned in
schools and libraries in America, but majority of text depicting violence is
free to be read by anyone who wishes. The idea of restricting what people can
read to a large extent is one very unlikely to occur in America as not only is text
censorship infamously connotated with the fascist Nazi Germany with their book
burnings, but it would require some moral superior to judge what is good for
the people and what isn’t, and such a superior never has, and never will exist.
Using the same logic, why should violent pictures be restricted? The exact same
content can be described using words, and the words won’t be censored. I even
used the example of films – moving pictures. I don’t know the actual logistics
of how videos work, but at the end of the day, whether literally or
figuratively, a video is just a string of snapshots of particular instances in
time. Therefore, a violent video is just a string of violent images. Are videos
depicting the cruelty of war censored? Again, not really. There’s even a time
of year when Hollywood releases tons of WW2 movies regardless of whether there
is a demand for them. At the same time, nobody really complains. Is it worse to
see a picture of someone being shot, or watching the whole backstory of the
person, feeling attached to the person, and then watching them get shot? The
latter is worse. And why do people not
complain? Because they know what is right and wrong, they already have a sense
of morality within them so they don’t need some higher power telling them whether
what they saw was appropriate. Some people will watch a violent movie and learn
something, while others will watch it and never think about it again, but nobody
complains about the movie’s existence. In other words, people don’t need a
higher power telling them whether films depicting violence should be watched or
not. So if text and film do not and will not have heavy restrictions regarding violent
content, why should pictures?
I completely agree and took the same side in my essay. I liked the comparisons you made with the prompt and past real world events. I also like how you ended with questions to leave the reader think
ReplyDeleteGood job Alankar. I liked how you added more thoughts to the essay that we wrote on friday. You also uses a lot of deep analysis questions in your blog which really makes the readers think.
ReplyDeleteI really liked how you incorporated every thing we did in this unit( I don't think its a unit but that's what I'm calling it). I think that maybe there is more of a argument and controversy surrounding showing graphic images because it is much more straightforward to show someone something rather than have them read it and then understand.
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