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Neil Postman on the Earthquake in Haiti
- 01/14/10
- 19
Yesterday, as an aspect of researching the book I’m working on, I read (re-read, actually) Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves To Death. The timing was interesting, coming as it did just one day after the horrifying earthquake in Haiti. Postman’s book deals with media in an age of entertainment and I found many of the lessons he teaches in the book immediately applicable to the situation in Haiti. Let me summarize some of them.
Our television culture grew out of the age of telegraphy. The great idea in the age of the telegraph was “that transportation and communication could be disengaged from each other, that space was not an inevitable constraint on the movement of information.” While there was a time when only Haitians would have known about the disaster, today, in our rapidly-shrinking world, it is immediately visible from pole-to-pole. But telegraphy did more than make the world much smaller. It unexpectedly “destroyed the prevailing definition of information, and in doing so gave a new meaning to public discourse.”
We now have context-free information; “that is, the idea that the value of information need not be tied to any function it might serve in social and political decision-making and action, but may attach merely to its novelty, interest, and curiosity. The telegraph made information into a commodity, a ‘thing’ that could be bought and sold irrespective of its uses or meaning.” And this is exactly what we are seeing today. News of the disaster is a valuable commodity which is why the top reporters from the top networks have all hustled to Haiti to gather information and, even more importantly, to show themselves within the disaster zone. The value of the information being sent to us is not in action but in the information itself.
We cannot overrate the importance of the images we are seeing on the screens before us (and truly they are both moving and horrifying). “In a peculiar way, the photograph was the perfect complement to the flood of telegraphic news-from-nowhere that threatened to submerge readers in a sea of facts from unknown places about strangers with unknown faces. For the photograph gave a concrete reality to the strange-sounding datelines, and attached faces to unknown names. Thus it provided the illusion, at least, that ‘the news’ had a connection to something within one’s sensory experience. It created an apparent context for the ‘news of the day.’ And the ‘news of the day’ created a context for the photograph. … But the sense of the context created by the partnership of photograph and headline was, of course, entirely illusory.” These photographs arouse our sympathy and somehow make us feel like we have more of a context to understand the disaster. It is not just an earthquake now, but a true disaster for the sad and terrified faces we see in photographs. We now feel like we are somehow attached to the information we are receiving, at least in a way we would not be were we only to read about it.
Yet what do we really know? “Telegraphic discourse permitted no time for historical perspectives and gave no priority to the qualitative. To the telegraph, intelligence meant knowing of lots of things, not knowing about them. … The telegraph introduced a kind of public conversation whose form had startling characteristics: Its language was the language of headlines—sensational, fragmented, impersonal.” Looking at photographs and reading a few headlines is knowledge of but not knowledge about.
“Most of our daily news is inert, consisting of information that gives us something to talk about but cannot lead to any meaningful action. This fact is the principle legacy of the telegraph: By generating an abundance of irrelevant information, it dramatically altered what may be called the ‘information-action ratio.’” “In both oral and typographic cultures, information derives its importance from the possibilities of action.” As we moved away from a typographic world into a telegraphic and television world (and now into a digital world), information became separated from action. “For the first time in human history, people were faced with the problem of information glut, which means that simultaneously they were faced with the problem of a diminished social and political potency.” This is a kind of information glut that makes us unable to react to all the information available to us or to do anything about most of it. Were we to actively respond to every situation and disaster that we learn about, we would be constantly in motion and constantly bankrupt. “For the first time, we were sent information which answered no question we had asked, and which, in any case, did not permit the right of reply.” We have become impotent to react in a meaningful way to the information we consume. “We have here a great loop of impotence: The news elicits from you a variety of opinions about which you can do nothing except to offer them as more news, about which you can do nothing.” What do you intend to do about the disaster in Haiti?
Three days from now we will have moved on. Maybe it will take four or five. But honestly, after the weekend, few of us will ever think of Haiti again. The next news story will come along and Haiti will be relegated to history. But three days from now and a week from now, the situation in Haiti will be far worse than it is today. The devastation will be more complete. The pain will be greater. The country has been devastated and it will take years to recover. At the end of the year when the best photographs of 2010 are revealed, the photos of Haiti, that make us weep today, will be nearly forgotten. By then they will be old news, eleven and a half months removed from the headlines. We’ll think, “Oh right, I remember that.” And then we will scroll down to the next photo.
Postman calls the world brought about and fostered by television a “peek-a-boo world” “where now this event, now that, pops into view for a moment, then vanishes again. It is a world without much coherence or sense; a world that does not ask us, indeed, does not permit us to do anything; a world that is, like the child’s game of peek-a-boo, entirely self-contained. But like peek-a-boo, it is also endlessly entertaining.”
And isn’t that what the Haiti earthquake is for most of us? It is entertainment. That sounds cold but it is exactly the case. If we turn on the television and watch those images and do nothing about it before moving on to the next news item, have we not merely been entertained?
In one regard I have to turn from Postman. Postman, though he knew his Bible well, was not a Christian and did not understand the power of prayer. Though we may be impotent to act, to actually go to Haiti and give aid, we can ask God to accomplish his purposes, even through so devastating a situation. We can pray for the nation and its people. We should pray for them, even, and especially for brothers in sisters in Christ who live in that country. We should pray that as people from around the world head to Haiti to feed the hungry and heal the sick, that they would take the gospel with them. And we can consider giving financially to credible organizations that will be involved in relief efforts (such as Compassion). It turns out that we are not entirely impotent in the aftermath of this great disaster.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (19)
Hey Tim,
I saw this article on CNN about Pat Robertson: http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/01/13/haiti.pat.robertson/index.html?iref=allsearch. I’d love to hear your response. In full disclosure, I think Robertson is at best a clown and at worst a fool.
Thanks.
Tim,I’ve had very similar thoughts yesterday. How many people remember the hundreds of thousands that died in the great Tsunami in 2004? By the time most Americans forget about Haiti, people will be suffering from starvation and destitute without a home and without possessions and trying to live life when their loved ones are dead. Their lives are forever changed. However, I hope many will pray fervently that the Lord uses this great suffering to bring many to faith in Christ. I am thankful to hear of many missionaries there who are helping diaconally while sharing and living out the gospel in the lives of those who are suffering.
I love the Big Picture, but the comments usually drive me crazy. This one was no exception…I can’t believe that in this time of tragedy, the atheists would use it for evangelism. Read the comments, their snide comments about prayer and those with faith in God…it’s so frustrating…oh that the Lord would save those who are perishing in Haiti, and save those who are attempting to use this tragedy as a springboard for fighting against His Kingdom.
I’m reminded of some lines from the excellent 2004 film Hotel Rwanda:
Paul Rusesabagina: “I am glad that you have shot this footage and that the world will see it. It is the only way we have a chance that people might intervene.” Jack: “Yeah and if no one intervenes, is it still a good thing to show?” Paul Rusesabagina: : “How can they not intervene when they witness such atrocities?” Jack: : “I think if people see this footage they’ll say, ‘oh my God that’s horrible,’ and then go on eating their dinners.” (thanks to www.imdb.com)
It’s all too true. This particular disaster has me thinking and praying because I’ve been to Haiti; I have Haitian friends; my church is deeply involved in partnership with a local church in northern Haiti. Our response to this disaster will be strong and ongoing, but not because of media coverage. God places us within spheres of influence for His purposes, and, horrible though the world has always been (we just see it now), every need does not justify a call on every person. Do whatever you can with what God has provided wherever He’s placed you; trust Him to move others to take care of the rest.
That’s why I’m encouraging people to give to Compassion International. Long after search and rescue teams have left the island, Compassion will still be there addressing the issues related to the extreme poverty in Haiti. Haiti’s poverty is why this earthquake was so devastating.
Donate to Compassion International
Do you think we could wait until there aren’t bodies lying in the streets to use this tragedy as a philosophical whipping boy?
I’m just sayin.
Superb work, Tim. You’re at your best on these kinds of topics. I’m hoping a future book is along the lines of Postman 2012 or something.
“Are you not entertained?!?” - Maximus, in Gladiator, at a numb crowd just having witnessed carnage and violence and tragedy in the ring….
While I generally agree with the Postman view on the busybodiness of most news, I wonder if this situation isn’t at least a partial exception. It’s geographically pretty close to the U.S., there’s a sizable American immigrant population with ties to Haiti, Americans have long been directly involved in Haiti in social and missionary work in fairly significant numbers, and I think we will keep hearing about the ongoing needs. This situation is devastating to a nation as a whole in a way that event the Indian Ocean tsunami was not, and I think that’s going to keep it in our faces. I don’t think this is going to be case of the collective mind moving on even before the disaster is done playing out.
Often times what we attend to is what has emotional what. The rest, as documented can become “just entertainment.” As Christians, we are comfortable with what is our own world and what we have emotional ties to. Here, Haiti for me is more relevant because the church I am a member of supports missionaries there. Now, at some level God puts us in places, and gives us a realm and scope to engage. We all when seeing these images, regardless of emotional ties, pray. Certainly in past I have been negligent to do so, or to attend to it because there is no immediate emotional connect.
At any rate, I do want to indicate that Heartline ministries is a good source of a place to donate as well. http://haiti-relief.orgto donate.
I understand what Postman (and you Tim) are saying…but yesterday those who saw the images and videos raised over $1 million dollars in 3 hours by texting 90999. Would that had been possible with print and oral? Maybe, but I seriously doubt it. Yes, we may move on in a few days (I pray deeply we don’t) but if we do whose fault is that? We, the children of light, should be and live differently.
No matter what we’ll live in a culture that at some deep level will want to reject Christ and therefore us. The “engine” of that culture will strive to overpower us, or if it can’t, it will attempt to deeply distract us to forgetfulness. Our calling has always been the same regardless of the CONTEXT: stay awake to the greater fact that this world is passing away, and that we’ve been saved to be salt and light…a peculiar people.
C’mon brothers and sisters…let’s step up.
Do you think we could wait until there aren’t bodies lying in the streets to use this tragedy as a philosophical whipping boy?
I assumed this comment would come. My “defense” is just this: as Christians we have good reason to take action through prayer and through giving. The biggest lesson, then, is not that this is about entertainment but that now that we’ve seen the disaster we do have some responsibility.
The recent flap over President Obama’s State of the Union speech is another example of this “amusing ourselves to death” mentality. Why let little things like war, terrorism, national security, healthcare and the economy get in the way of a two hour TV show premier?
I think about the modern day “Christian response” to disaster.
50 years ago it would have taken a few days for us to hear about such things.
100 years ago it would have taken weeks.
And the churches response was naturally slow and laborious.
But today, we get it instantly. Does this mean we have to respond with our time, money and prayers? It does!
“To whom much is given, much is required.:”
David RupertRed Letter Believers Bloghttp://www.redletterbelievers.com“Salt and Light”
Having also read Postman’s book several times, I agree that he raises many valid points. I was relieved, however, to read your final paragraph. As a believer, I was frantically searching the Internet for information soon after the event occurred. Our church has missions contacts on the island & surrounding areas, some of our own people have served there as evangelists, we have prayed for specific Haitian believers and I generally make it a point to think outside my “American” box, wishing to pray knowledgeably for all the countries of the world. After watching the expanded Evening News last night, as well as this AM, I have now have at least limited information that will help me pray more knowledgeably. Btw, AMG International is also an excellent mission to donate disaster relief funds to. They have an excellent track record in Guatemala following the devastating mud slides there a number of years ago. They were able to turn horrible disaster into an opportunity to bring the lost into the kingdom.
“Why let little things like war, terrorism, national security, healthcare and the economy get in the way of a two hour TV show premier?”
The irony here is that it’s not war, terrorism, national security et al getting in the way of a two hour TV show premiere, but a media event where somebody talks about all of the above so that we THINK we’re concerning ourselves with all of the above. It’s only marginally more serious than the TV show, and probably just as much part of the problem that Postman saw.
“It’s true we are amused when fact is fiction and TV reality…”
It seems like this technology does bring such events to our attention more readily, but the “peek-a-boo” affect only serves to anesthetize us to the world’s hurts (and worse, distract us with Pat Robertson quotes).
Tim- thanks for drawing our attention to Postman. Having read that book a few months ago I have become increasingly skeptical about the average American’s ability to distinguish between knowing “of” and knowing “about” various events/people. Case in point: the Michael Jackson funeral circus. How many shed tears over a man they’ve known only through music and television? Those people honestly believed they “knew” Michael Jackson, which validates Postman’s criticism of television as the dominant media of 1984.
However, without the tele/photograph, (and I’m glad to have read the comments from others who feel similarly) there’s no way that we could have known the depths of this tragedy, and without knowing, we wouldn’t help. At all. Not with prayers, time, OR money. True, it is regrettable that many (most?) will forget about Haiti by next Monday, if they haven’t already, but there are thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, who will be moved to action through the photos and news coverage they see. I am already raising support to go in late February, and without the technology of television and the internet, I wouldn’t be going. Neither would anyone, at least not for several months.
I like Postman’s book and I think he was prophetic in some ways, and even though the Internet wasn’t ubiquitous when he wrote “Amusing” I think his concerns are applicable to the Internet even more so than to television. Maybe this is an area where the church can distinguish itself from its surrounding culture? Because we have a bigger vision of life and the life to come I believe we MUST not move on too quickly. We can’t go everywhere we are needed or give to everyone with their hand out, but we can go somewhere and give to someone.
Without modern technology, I’m fairly certain we would all be occupied by something far more trivial this afternoon.
I agree that for the most part the mass media coverage has done the same thing that has happened during any natural disaster. However, I think there is a drastic difference with how Social Media has treated this crisis.
The Red Cross is reporting receipts over $3 Million dollars from texting services and they are just one group. I personally donated to another group through a link that one of the people I follow on twitter posted. I am hoping that atleast one of my followers did the same when I retweeted that link. I also saw dozens of people sharing information about how to help provide aid to those that are going to help on twitter.
In addition, I received updates from an old roomate of mine who is a Missionary Kid living in Haiti right now via Facebook. He was able to inform me and several people about the devestation and things we should be concerned about in particular.
I agree that in a couple days time this will have mostly slipped from the collective concious of us as Americans but that may not matter because of Social Media was able to respond quickly. Maybe the information became actionable. I remember watching hours of footage of the Southeast Asian Tsunami a few years back and I realize now that I was concerned by the situation but I probably did nothing. However, I read quite a few tweets about Haiti but I don’t think I spent that much time and I also donated money. I may not be the typical American but my media interaction with Haiti was much more actionable than the last time we were faced with a traumatic natural disaster. Neil Postman has a lot to say to our culture but I think it is possible that Social Media is reversing some of the effects of the telegraph.
First of all a prayer request for varied people serving in Haiti for supernatural provision: /archives/articles/neil-postman-on-the-earthquake-in-haiti.php
As to thoughts on media and this event. Yes, we live in a world that is getting ever smaller. The impact of what happened at Babel is ever decreasing. I have a term for it, debabelfication. The growing ability to communicate over the God induced barriers. Something to think about at least, eventually will write about that in an article one day. Until then, pray for those serving Haiti, which is a country of both much spiritual and economic poverty.