The Tyranny of Real Time and the Intensification of the Spectacle
$4.95
political science
term papers
published 11/12/2007
review : Completed
level : Advanced
requested 1 times
While screening clips of American soldiers fighting in Iraq and analysis of the insurgency spews forth from the mouth of an expert on the conflict, Fox Newss scrolling news ticker reports Homeland Securitys terrorist alert level on loop, warning its viewers that terrorism, namely Islamic, continually threatens their daily lives. However, the term terrorism is ambiguous. Its sheer emptiness as an objective word is propagandized to cement the belief that the American nation is under siege. Of course, it was due to the belief in a persistent external threat, terrorism as in Saddam Husseins supposed potential ability to terrorize the United States with biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons, that the public backed President George W. Bushs decision to declare war on Iraq in 2003. However, the looping of the 9/11 attacks on television screens for the weeks after the cataclysmic event solidified the siege mentality, which had been compounding upon itself for years, in the United States creating a populace that was ignorant of their complicit support for the spectacle and the neo-liberalism it espouses. However, equally terrifying as 9/11 is the terror of the maintenance of the status quo through the forceful expansion of the spectacle and its neo-liberal values. The expansion of the spectacle has severed neo-liberal populaces from reality via instantaneous telecommunication promoting instantaneous fear and the subsequent desire to be sheltered from external threats. And yet, the people mechanically promoting the spectacle are unaware that through their support they are, in fact, caught in a perpetual cyclical terrorization.
Table of Contents
- Today's global society.
- The medias barrage on humanity with images and words.
- Psychologically constraining individual critical abilities.
- The consistent stream of information.
- The cultural and economic homogenization of cities.
- The structure of the city of panic.
- Bringing the world colser geo-spatially.
- Conclusion.
