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Commentary:Media Literacy and the Fog of War by Margaret Crocco and William Gaudelli
Published Online: August 25, 2009
Published in Print: August 26, 2009
Commentary
Media Literacy and the Fog of War
By Margaret Crocco and William Gaudelli
Comparisons of the current U.S. engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan to
America’s war in Vietnam have abounded in recent years—but particularly
since the death in July of Robert S. McNamara, the former U.S.
secretary of defense. Mr. McNamara himself had spent his last years
pondering the moral quandaries of all military conflict, agreeing with
the assessment of Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay, who, in recalling the
American firebombing of Japanese cities during World War II, said, “If
we’d lost the war, we’d all have been prosecuted as war criminals.”
“What makes it immoral if you lose and not immoral if you win?” Mr.
McNamara wondered aloud.
This question and other, more fundamental ones about the reasons for
going to war—Did the North Vietnamese really attack us at the Gulf of
Tonkin? Did Saddam Hussein really have weapons of mass
destruction?—have often perplexed American citizens. Still, the odds of
getting answers were probably better during the Vietnam War—the
conflict that defined Mr. McNamara’s career—than they are today.
“Being McNamara’d” entered the nation’s lexicon as an expression for
disinformation about the war. Nevertheless, television networks during
the 1960s and ’70s broadcast unedited footage of firefights from
Vietnam on the nightly news. The New York Times waged a courageous and
successful battle for its First Amendment rights in publishing the
Pentagon Papers. News reporting had a profound effect on the war
itself, eroding public support for its continued prosecution.
Fast-forward to today’s sanitized and streamlined coverage of the
current military engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Pentagon
rations information about these conflicts through daily briefings and
embedded reporters. Only the recent lifting of the government ban on
images of fallen soldiers’ flag-draped coffins has reminded Americans
in a palpable fashion of the human cost from these wars.
That contrast was driven home to us during the past year as we sorted
through hours of documentary footage from the landmark 1983 Public
Broadcasting Service documentary series “Vietnam: A Television
History.” Our work—part of a unique, federally funded educational
project combining the efforts of wgbh Boston, the University of
Massachusetts Boston, Columbia University’s Center for New Media
Teaching and Learning, and Teachers College—has left us convinced that
changes in the news media, together with an end to the draft and
compassion fatigue in the face of the 24-hour news cycle, have combined
to put recent wars in a more ambiguous cultural and psychological space
for Americans than the Vietnam War inhabited in its day.
Now, more than ever, we must teach students to read between the
lines—to become media critics who understand who controls and shapes
the information and images we see.
We believe education has a major role to play in fighting this trend.
Student engagement is critically important to the nation’s civic life,
especially as voting and community service by young people trend
upward. Research indicates that teaching history improves students’
interest in public life, especially when it’s taught in ways that
encourage the students to dig deeply into controversial issues, debate
alternative positions, and participate in service-learning. And while
Vietnam hardly qualifies today as a controversial topic, it certainly
offers lessons that apply to our current military engagements.
But for teachers, it is no longer enough to simply assign reading,
whether of history or the news. With the recent implosion of America’s
newspapers, journalism is now largely in the hands of either a few
surviving corporate behemoths or the blogosphere. Both have their own
axes to grind, and neither is devoting much in the way of resources to
war coverage. Rising costs and declining revenues have decimated the
foreign bureaus of most American newspapers, even as television
networks sent scores of film crews to Los Angeles to cover Michael
Jackson’s funeral.
Then, too, the very nature of media is changing. This is the generation
that communicates via Twitter, Facebook and MySpace; that learns via
cellphone images; and that takes its history from themovies. One study
found that for many young people, the single most important source of
knowledge about the Vietnam War is the film “Forrest Gump.”
Thus now, more than ever, we must teach students to read between the
lines—to become media critics who understand who controls and shapes
the information and images we see.
Other nations are doing this, making media literacy a staple of the
curriculum. Students in these countries are taught the skill of
deconstructing both images and written accounts in much the same way
they are taught to analyze Shakespeare or primary sources in history.
We would do well to follow their example by designing more classes that
ask: What information is made available to us? Who controls and shapes
it, how is it presented, and what kind of critical skills do we need to
have to make sense of it? Otherwise, as even the man considered the
primary architect of the Vietnam War essentially conceded near the end
of his life, we will doom ourselves—in Iraq, in Afghanistan, and
wherever else we might find ourselves—to a future of being McNamara’d
ad infinitum.
Margaret Crocco is a professor and the coordinator of the program in
social studies at Teachers College, Columbia University. William
Gaudelli is an associate professor in the same program. They have
collaborated on the development of a variety of social studies
curricula using new media.
Education Week Vol. 29, Issue 01, Pages 26-27
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