ISR COVID-19 Blog

Page 43

edgehill.ac.uk/ISR

Covid-19: Hollywood’s Next 9/11? 22nd May 2020 Dr Jenny Barrett scholarship, cultural commentary M edia and movie reviews regularly reflect on production contexts and their impact on possible readings of the films and shows we watch. Both 9/11 and the Covid-19 epidemic have been described by as ‘America under attack.’ President Trump has stated that the epidemic is a ‘worse attack’ on the US than both Pearl Harbor and 9/11; extending a political rhetoric that has linked 1941 and 2001.[1] In the wake of 9/11 numerous books and articles have considered its impact on tropes, gender representations, heroic (and superheroic) constructions and visual representations of, not only terrorism, but also violence more generally. 9/11 also impacted representations of ethnicity in a binary of ‘good’ versus ‘evil’. Saving Jessica Lynch, for example, a US 2003 made-forTV movie, dramatised the ‘rescue’ of Private First-Class Lynch (white, female) from an Iraqi hospital, characterised the Iraqis as sadistic savages, and of course, Islamic zealots. Reflecting both 9/11 and Covid-19, Dahlia Schweitzer explores a striking connection between terrorism and contagion when she writes about the spate of TV shows in the post-9/11 period, that combined the terrorist threat with deliberate viral infection. In such examples, either a virus-laden ‘bomb’ is hidden in a public place or an infected person deliberately spreads the virus within the USA; often again with racial undertones.

In 24 (Fox, Season 3, 2003-4),[2] the viral threat hails from Mexican drug barons. In, Steven Soderbergh’s Contagion (2011), the virus is traced to food preparation in China. In both, the origin of the threat is placed the ‘exotic’ Global South and East – while the location under ‘threat’ is the affluent Global North. Such representations follow a narrative pattern that ‘buries the workings of colonialism.’[3] 2020 may have a similar, if not even a more pronounced impact on popular culture that goes beyond the films and TV shows that are broadly labelled ‘Hollywood.’ Yet it is likely that the stories will be told, as with 9/11, in a way that reflects dominant attitudes towards the ‘others’ responsible for the threat.

Dr Jenny Barrett is Reader in Film Studies and Popular Culture, and Deputy Director: International Centre for Racism at Edge Hill University. References: [1] For example, Ebony Bowden, ‘Trump says coronavirus pandemic ‘worse than Pearl Harbor…World Trade Center’, New York Post, 6th May 2020 [2] Dahlia Schweitzer “Terrorist as Contagious Other.” In Media Res.29th November 2016. [3] Mark Bould, ‘The Virus Has Seized the Means of Production,’ Boston Review, 8th May 2020. .

Where there is attack there is an aggressor, setting the scene for an ideal melodramatic conflict of good and evil. Based on the narratives emerging from the post-9/11 era, and given President Trump’s wellpublicised Tweets referring to the ‘Chinese virus,’ we may be set to see more films and TV shows placing the blame for global threat on China specifically or fictional places conspicuously designed to mimic that nation. Such representation will serve to re-enforce conceptualisations of good and evil, rather than challenge them.

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To the Moon and Back: Summing up the ISR/EHU Covid-19 Blog

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Covid-19, Higher Education and the rise of video-based learning

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Streaming and CGI? The future of TV and Film after COVID-19?

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Can the new Labour Leadership Rise to the Challenge?

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Creative Resilience and going OFFLine during Lockdown

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Covid-19: Hollywood’s Next 9/11?

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Towards a ‘Next Normal’: HE and Reflection at Speed

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Epidemics: A View from Italy

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Emerging from Lockdown: Shared Experience as we (re)commune together

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Everyday Creativity: Why the Arts need to Rethink What Matters

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Coming Out” and Covid-19

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Flattening the Acceptance Curve: Transitioning a more Inclusive World after COVID-19

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Pandemics, Prohibition and the Past: COVID-19 in Historical Perspective

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We Make the Road by Walking: A ‘Kinder’ Society after COVID-19?

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Constructing a ‘New Normal’: What Changes when it’s all over?

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The Road to Nowhere? Tourism after Covid-19

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COVID-19 and Child Abuse in Institutions

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Citizen Science to tackle Poor Air Quality post COVID-19

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Images in the Head; the Pervasiveness of Dreaming in Isolation

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Dig where you stand: Histories of where you live in a Global Pandemic

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Blitzed by Myths: The ‘Spirit’ of the Blitz and COVID-19

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New Realities? New Culture? What next for HR post Covid-19?

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Temporary or Fixed? Changing Business Models in a Global Pandemic

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An Outcome of the Coronavirus Outbreak

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Re-imagining a ‘Good Society’ in the wake of COVID-19

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Lockdown and Educational Inequality: Some Reflections

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Wither Fake News: COVID-19 and its Impact on Journalism

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COVID-19: Lockdown when you are Locked Up

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Ministry without the Ministered: Reflections from a Vicar in Lockdown

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Fingerprints, DNA and Policing Powers during COVID-19

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Lockdown 2020 – The Impact on Social Care

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Where is the Balance – Democracy in the Lockdown

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Is it kindness that matters?

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