Have we learned nothing? Thirty years ago, the Band-Aid video
showed pop stars with 1980s hair raising funds for “Africa”. But it
wasn’t for Africa, even though the resulting record featured a guitar in
the shape of a continent. It was Ethiopia, and the resulting “documentary”
began with BBC clips of starving people lined up for food in a camp,
with the usual flies swarming, hollowed eyes, and white doctors being
interviewed regarding their plight. The songs, the recordings, the video
– all identified all of Africa with these images of helplessness,
sounding the call of the “white savior industrial complex”
for a new generation. Despite the feel-good super sales of the song,
controversy continues around the question of whether the effort did more
material harm than good.
Fast forward to today: The just-released remix
of the principal song of the 1984 Band-Aid concerts — “Do They Know
It’s Christmas?” — plays to the same sentiments with many of the same
stars (and some new ones, like One Direction) — and has all of the same
problems. Again, have we really learned nothing? The video opens with
what was known in the 1990s as “aid pornography” (a term and debate
which unfortunately has dropped from the radar screen) – shots of dying people – shots that these stars would
never allow of themselves. Then we see them filing into the studio
one-by-one in the requisite shades, every move (but looking good, not in
the throes of death) captured by paparazzi, then emotionally singing,
then holding each other, giggling and smiling after they have done their
good deed.
Yes, funds are needed to fight Ebola; yes, people are suffering; yes, it
can be good to “do good”. But it is never good to show others’
suffering without their consent, especially when showing them stripped
of dignity. And as many of the CIHA Blog’s posts and those of others
insist, over and over again, what we need is to target the neoliberal
austerity policies that have led to the breakdown of health systems in
West Africa as well as other areas of the world (including many parts of
the U.S.) Representing Africans – yet again – as helpless and without
dignity while representing ourselves as knowledgeable problem-solvers
(who give up nothing in our attempts to do good) IS part of the problem
and NOT part of the solution. We Westerners really should have learned
something by now.
by Cecelia Lynch, Professor of Political Science and Director of the
Institute for International, Global and Regional Studies at the
University of California, Irvine.
from here with links
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