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Mediatized Witnessing and the Ethical Imperative of Capture

Mediatized Witnessing and the Ethical Imperative of Capture

Sasha A Q Scott
Copyright: © 2020 |Pages: 14
ISBN13: 9781522598695|ISBN10: 1522598693|EISBN13: 9781522598701
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-9869-5.ch021
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MLA

Scott, Sasha A Q. "Mediatized Witnessing and the Ethical Imperative of Capture." Media Controversy: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice, edited by Information Resources Management Association, IGI Global, 2020, pp. 373-386. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-9869-5.ch021

APA

Scott, S. A. (2020). Mediatized Witnessing and the Ethical Imperative of Capture. In I. Management Association (Ed.), Media Controversy: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice (pp. 373-386). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-9869-5.ch021

Chicago

Scott, Sasha A Q. "Mediatized Witnessing and the Ethical Imperative of Capture." In Media Controversy: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice, edited by Information Resources Management Association, 373-386. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2020. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-9869-5.ch021

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Abstract

What does it mean to witness in an age saturated with media technology? This paper argues the need to rescue witnessing as a concept from its conflation with the watching and passive consumption of events. As an inherently political practice, the mediatization of witnessing is bound within questions of ethics and morality and has the potential to realign power and control in society. This article explores these issues through the witnessing of public death events: those shocking, exceptional and morally significant deaths that become ‘public' through their mediation, observing that the continuous and contiguous production and consumption of media content has given rise to new performative rituals of local witnessing for (potentially) global audiences. I argue that the mediatization of witnessing serves to increase our moral awareness of seeing, rendering an ethical imperative of capture on those that witness, and thereby closing the veracity gap between events and their meaning.

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