Citizen
of the World
A
Picture Inspires a Thousand Words
By Elizabeth Horner
Two
pictures.
One
features an old man, sitting on a bed in a decrepit apartment. The gun
in his
hand provides a sharp contrast to the lax expression on his face.
Looking at
it, I think my expectation of tension is stronger than what I would
have felt
if it was depicted as an actual tension-filled scene.
The
other photograph couldn’t be more alike --- or different. A woman is
poised on
a parking lot curve. Her perfect 80’s hairstyle and icy glare seem like
a part
of her personality, not just accessories of the moment.
My
Writing II teacher handed us a piece of
paper in which both of these photos were featured side-by-side and told
us to
explain what was confusing about the images. What exactly was the
photographer,
as the manipulator of the scene, trying to get us to see?
But
even as I went about completing my
assignment, it occurred to me that there was more than one person who
was
actively shaping our impressions. Even though we were only supposed to
talk
about one picture at a time, most of my fellow students framed their
answers in
terms of a contrast between them both. “The lighting in this picture
was better
than in this picture….”, “Look at her face. She’s obviously more
high-strung
than he is…”, etc. It made me wonder how different everyone’s comments
might
have been if they had something else to compare it to. More than that,
it made
me wonder if ‘compare and contrast’, the skill we have been taught
since our
elementary school days, was not hindering our ability to see things for
what
they are, apart from and in spite of their context.
When
Dr. Polchin gave us this worksheet, he was
presenting it to us as one picture and its opposite. It was,
consciously or
not, a prompt to use language that is relative--- words like “hotter”,
“nicer”,
“cheaper”, which are not descriptions onto themselves, but have meaning
only
when they rest on at least two subjects. And therein lays a mistake.
In
my previous “Citizen of the World” articles,
I have attempted to cite my experiences here in the United Kingdom
versus what
I had known in America--- and while they were an accurate depiction of
my
feelings at the time, I hope they are not a disservice to either of
these two places.
Because the truth is, in today’s society, where so much is run in the
spirit of
competition, too much value gets placed on what is “better” and not
what is
“quality”. Every country’s culture is composed of the habits and
customs of its
citizens, therefore making it unlike any other culture in the world. If
we only
focus on those elements of it that can find an equivalent in another
nation,
then the possibility is we’re missing out on something new and
wondrous. We
might be going abroad and never truly expand our horizons.
I
have loved the time that I have been in
London. Even if it is difficult to find many of my American staples
here---
from Mountain Dew to familiar brands of laundry detergent--- I would
not say
that it is lacking for anything. Reality shows me that the grass is
green on
both sides of the ocean, and that two pictures can tell two completely
different stories that are still worth a thousand words.
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