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10-11-01

Signs in the Rubble

By Shari Cohen

“We are sorry for what happened.”  “We are thinking of the rescue workers.”  So read letters from school children from Osceola, Florida that had been hung on a bus stop shelter on Chambers Street between Greenwich and West streets, where the checkpoints to stem the flow of traffic to “Ground Zero” are set up.  The entire back of the shelter was occupied by the letters and by a large painting of a brown sky filled with smoke over the two fallen towers that the kids had drawn based on what they saw on TV.  The advertisement for Rockport shoes, on one side panel of the shelter, is dwarfed now by the handmade and individual human contributions that decorate the rest of the structure. 

Other signs of this remarkable moment include:

  • The disaster site itself, the former center of commerce, might become a park or a memorial to victims.  The rescue effort on that site is one of the most significant voluntary efforts ever.   

  • At the Metropolitan Opera House, a large American flag now hangs between the Chagalls.  Ads from corporate sponsors have never achieved such a position. 

  • The city stepped in to prevent the hawking of WTC dust, providing families of victims with urns.   

  • The mayor told people to remember to shop.   

  • A sign on the front window of Kenneth Cole, the fashionable shoe store, reads: “What we   stand for is more important than what we stand in.”   

  • The Barnes and Noble at 66th and Broadway has posted a sign about the firemen from the local station, one block over on Amsterdam Avenue, who were lost in the rescue effort.   

  • Huge media conglomerates took great losses by providing coverage of the first weeks of news without advertising.   

  • Investing in stocks is an act of patriotism.  (A leftist-oriented friend saw her purchase of Nikes after the attack as a sort of act of resistance.) 

The city has changed.  Everyone has remarked on it.  But what kind of change is this?  The planes ripping through the World Trade Center have momentarily torn away the boundaries between the people of the city: greed has turned to altruism.  Cynicism has, for the moment, been replaced by earnestness as the need for connection to something larger became acute and widely shared.  And the terribly real experience of September 11 seems to have eclipsed the preoccupation with image.  

On the bus shelter, at the disaster site and around town, the very physical space that had been occupied by commerce in this city of commerce, this center of globalization, seems increasingly to be occupied by civic activism through volunteering, patriotism and neighborly concern.

Has the ever increasing role of business in our lives – that critical trend in which everything from relationships to religion were commodified -- been pushed off course?   Is this a new efflorescence of that elusive civic engagement that academics, politicians and activists have been trying to build for the last decade?  Is this an acceleration of existing trends in which the market has been increasingly mixing profit with human concerns and might companies find a way to invest in human, local and socially responsible endeavors even as they need to cut back?  Is the “civic” itself a marketing scam, perpetuating a nostalgia for an Americanism of a more innocent period? 

The signs are ambiguous.  There is no way to know what kind of new era we are entering, and if it is new at all.   At best we can try to read the signs of the changed city and ask questions that might help us understand both the possibilities – and the dangers – in this moment.

 

Cynicism and earnestness

I am not the first to remark on the new earnestness that seems to be emerging.   The pervasive cynicism of recent years, which by definition put people at a distance from one another and from common ideals, seems to have waned.  Even Madison Avenue is recognizing a decline of cynicism as evidenced in the following e-mail from a marketing firm passed on to me by a friend: 

If there are more terrorist attacks, military action with loss of life and further erosion of the U.S. economy, the psyche of the young consumer could change.   Young people might become more introspective; they may question their values and adjust their priorities.  Many of the marketing/advertising appeals of recent years (e.g., cool, status, irony, cynicism, shock value) may sound hollow to young people seeking security, community, guidance and value. 

The relief and rapidity with which the flag was embraced, even by people who are generally ambivalent about this symbol ("I am from the generation that burned flags but today I embrace it fully and with no question," said one cousin), is suggestive of impulses and desires for unqualified and common connection to something larger – and something not for sale.  Or does it matter if it is for sale?  Marketing firms in recent years would have loved an idea as "viral" as the flag.  

Is it necessarily true that marketing "security" and "guidance" dehumanize and hollow out such values?  Or is this a moment for the market to be redirected to human ends?  How resilient and lasting will this new earnestness be?  

Obviously, with the flag waving – marketed or not -- often comes jingoism: stronger collective identification usually means a boundary against the “other.”  Right now, the "other" is anyone who appears to be of Middle Eastern origin.  (Interestingly, this has momentarily superseded the divide based on class and the black-white divide.)  The challenge is whether we can bind ourselves together without creating an "other," a challenge that looks increasingly tricky at a moment when Americans are ready to accept racial profiling and other restraints on civil liberties.  The elusiveness of terrorism as an enemy, however, and the difficulty of identifying the real threat present an intriguing possibility for a "we" based on common values, not on opposition to an “other.” But what common values are these?   Surely there is a shift toward valuing the ideals, not just the free markets, of western civilization.  But what would a world organized around civilizations really look like?  Do all those flags really mean the resurgence of the nation-state or loyalty to something else?  And surely, the "we" that is currently being forged is still subject to trends toward higher levels of individualism than ever before.

 

Greed and altruism

If a shift away from cynicism allows for greater connection to common norms, a move from greed to altruism breaks down the boundaries between neighbors and people of different classes, enabling new possibilities for common action.  My parents' upscale apartment building that rises above the firehouse at 66th and Amsterdam decided to make its exclusive health club available for the use of the firemen from the station, which lost 11 of its men in the rescue effort. The firehouse had, previously, entered residents' consciousness mostly because the sirens could diminish property values.  Strangers in the health club would have been considered an annoyance at best; last week my mother reported that she and other residents felt privileged to talk to the firemen who took advantage of the offer to enter the doorman building which, while one door down, had been worlds away.   

The fancy restaurants downtown – Danube, Bouley Bakery and others – hand out food to rescue workers even as they worry about whether they will remain in business in the months ahead.  A new public radio ad for Danube says that the restaurant, which had been feeding rescue workers, is now open for business.  Cabbies seem not to want tips. 

How long will the new awarenesses – of common vulnerability and humanity and of the limits of the gated and isolated lives the city breeds – last?  What will sustain them?  The jostling for subway space, that breeds dozens of small conflicts each day in New York, was markedly subdued in the first weeks after September 11th .  But it is slowly returning.  Might these other shifts toward greater altruism be ephemeral as well?   Or will the new awareness result in new policies like the one in my parents' building?  Will they result in new coalitions?  Will the new altruism extend beyond people involved in the World Trade Center disaster (to the homeless, for example)?

 

Image and real experience 

One reason to think it might be possible to sustain some of the new altruism is the fact that image – both our highly mediated lives and our preoccupation with consumption as a way of building our own image -- seems to have been replaced by real experience, stretching people into new areas of understanding.  There is no escaping the real, physical nature of this event: The city divided at Chambers Street with subways silently sailing past the stops downtown.  The smoldering piles of rubble.  The pieces of bodies.  The ubiquitous posters of the missing.  The shrines to the victims in Union Square and in firehouses around town.  

In light of this, I have been wondering what will become of what social theorists have begun to call the "experience economy" with its emphasis on providing simulations of real life for sale.  This trend – from buying antiques to adventure travel – showed a desire not just for authenticity, but for a depth and intensity of feeling.  There is a terrible irony in the fact that the generation that engaged in body-piercing and extreme sports as a way of feeling something in an increasingly MacDonaldized world have now had – and might continue to face -- real life and death experiences.  

Will this real-life experience of other worlds – the world of radical Islam, the world of violence and loss – enlarge us by breaking down our boundaries, or will we recoil into survivalism?  What is the difference, in this regard, between the people of New York, and those in the rest of the country? 

This moment of earnestness, altruism and reality of experience might well fade as we attempt to rekindle people’s desire to consume and to return New York to its place as the engine of global commerce.  But this moment – by having offered us a glimpse of a different sort of relationship to others, and a new ordering of priorities in this city of consumption -- could also function to enlarge our capacity to imagine new ways of constructing the balance among profit, consumption, human relationship and a better society.  And this might even be accomplished through the market, albeit by a market with reordered priorities.

We are very quick to want to return to life before September 11, even though we know that the future is very much up for grabs.  But we need to avoid trying to cover over the rupture with past assumptions and approaches.  We need to have the courage to live with the uncertainty as we read the meaning of the signs of renewal that have appeared from out of the rubble of this disaster.


    

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