This article argues that the BBC World footage of the bombardment of Baghdad, March–April 2003, manages to take sides in the controversy over the Iraq war, without violating the principle of objectivity — a principle necessary for the credibility of public service broadcasting. Making use of the ‘analytics of mediation’, I show that the semiotic choices of this footage construe the bombardment of Baghdad in a regime of pity, whereby the aesthetic quality of the spectacle effaces the presence of Iraqi people as human beings and sidelines the question of the coalition troops identity either as benefactors or bombers. This combination is instrumental in aestheticising the horror of war at the expense of raising issues around the legitimacy and effects of the war.
The taking of sides in the BBC ‘update’ occurs precisely through this aestheticised representation of warfare that denies the sufferer her humanity and relieves the bomber of his responsibility in inflicting the suffering. By rendering these identities irrelevant to the spectacle of the suffering, the footage ultimately suppresses the emotional, ethical and political issues that lie behind the bombardment of Baghdad.
2023. Reconstructing the peacekeeper: the televised sense-making of Sweden’s shifting policy on the use of force after the military failure in Bosnia 1995. Journal of War & Culture Studies► pp. 1 ff.
Sandman, Tua
2023. How violence dis/appears in narratives on war-like operations: a conceptual framework. Critical Military Studies 9:3 ► pp. 285 ff.
Doboš, Pavel
2019. The problem of different post-colonial spatial contexts in television news about distant wartime suffering. International Communication Gazette 81:6-8 ► pp. 644 ff.
Cheliotis, Leonidas K.
2010. The ambivalent consequences of visibility: Crime and prisons in the mass media. Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal 6:2 ► pp. 169 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 4 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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