Power of Graffiti and Images
Every day, people read the news in the papers or hear reports on television about various crimes. It is easy to dismiss the words on the page or the anchor people. It is much harder to run away from an image. Long ago, people discovered that images were more potent than written words could be. There is the old expression that a picture is worth one thousand words. In both the articles "Exquisite Corpse" and "The Wall-Reader" focus on the importance of visual images to convey messages to the world at large. In the first story, Ashraf Rushdy uses the stories of Emmett Till and James Byrd to convey how times have changed between one racially-charged murder and another. In the first case, photos of Till's corpse were made public to teach the world about the horrors of racism and in the second, Byrd's photographs were not publicized because his family members did not think it was necessary. In Fiona Barr's story, a young woman goes out for a stroll with her child only to have her eyes opened to the horrors of the world around her. She is an embodiment of the person who could hear about the violence around her and ignore it until she is face-to-face with it. Both the stories are about people who are forever altered by the things that they see.
In Ashraf Rushdy's news article entitled "Exquisite Corpse," the author compares two of the most horrific crimes in American history. The crimes are more than forty years apart but were perpetrated because of the same ignorant reasons. Emmett Till and James Byrd were not killed for anything they did, but because of the color of their skin. Racism was the motive behind their deaths. The cases of Emmett Till and James Byrd were similar in that the young men were brutally murdered solely because of their skin color. Their corpses took on new meaning after their deaths. Not just the leftover remains of a former human being; they became icons of destruction and symbols of the deadly nature of racism. However, even more than a discussion about the two harrowing acts of racist individuals in the American south, the article is also discussion about the importance of the body as a symbol of something larger. The human corpse in the Till case and the bodies of Byrd and his killer are emblems of the psychological and sociological crises of hate crimes.
In the story "The Wall-Reader," a woman is nonchalantly walking her young child about the streets in Belfast. Here too, the central event is a crime. Although painting graffiti on walls is hardly on the same level of criminality as murder, it is still an act of rebellion against the rules of the authority figure. This woman represents the viewing audience. Just as she watches the different graffiti as a hobby, so the reader is viewing this woman. She is an avatar for all of humanity who sit by as the rest of the world descends into acts of violence. At first, she watches the walls for no reason other than as a means for passing the time. Over time, she realizes that the messages are more important than she had originally estimated and they have a direct impact on her life.
After Emmett Till was murdered by white supremacists in the American south, his mother made the decision to have an open-casket funeral. This decision completely changed the American idea about its racism problem. Till's mother also invited members of the press as well as cameramen to the funeral service so that the state of Emmett's body could be captured forever and preserved as a part of American history. Before Till, Americans, particularly in the north, were able to ignore racism or dismiss it as not being a major problem. The unforgettable image of the desecrated young boy in...
Graffiti: An Anthropological Analysis Graffiti is one of the oldest extant art forms: graffiti has been found on ancient monuments as well as on subways and billboards across the urban landscape of today (Alonso 1998: 3). The piece of graffiti I chose to use was a series of images inscribed on a No Parking sign. I found this piece of graffiti [URL: http://www.flickr.com/photos/livenature/235459080/] on a common photo-sharing application known as 'Flickr'
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