Wednesday, December 14, 2011

The Negative Effects of TV Violence on Society

           The 21st century has seen one of the most intellectually, rapid increases in human technology since the beginning of history. New advances in technology seem to spread faster than diseases these days. One of the most important advances in the recent decades has been that of television. Television has literally opened the eyes of people around the world visually to the problems and successes of faraway lands, previously unheard of. However, this technological success has come at a cost. As humans begin to watch more and more TV, the actual and fictional death and violence has exposed people to previously unheard amounts. The immense amount of gore has altered our viewpoint of violence and some believe that it has actually made us insensitive to violence.
            As television and its uncensored images are spread, younger and younger children are exposed to its horrific violence. Children are reported to see an average of 8,000 murders on TV by the time they finish elementary school, and that number rises to 200,000 by age eighteen (Norman, 1). When children are exposed to this immense violence at such a young age, they lose their ability to understand how bad violence truly is. Left unattended, a child will start to become insensitive to violence and become more likely to commit these acts because they don’t know how bad the consequences truly are. These children are increasing watching TV unsupervised. In fact 81% of TV time spend by children 2-7 is unsupervised, so these children are not learning that the violence is harmful (Kaiser Family Foundation, 1).
A new poll shows 79% of Americans believe that TV violence leads to real life chaos and mayhem (Norman, 1). The correlation between violence and TV isn’t a coincidence either. In a recent study by the American Medical Association, 2,888 out of 3,000 studies showed that violence is a casual factor in real life mayhem. This shows that TV violence has a direct correlation to desensitizing violence in everyday life.
Nowadays television shows are practically glamorizing murder and serious crimes because it accounts for thrilling television that brings the audiences back for more. As television has spread to almost every part of the world, it now affects world atrocities and warfare. People around the world are now being exposed to the graphic and horrific images of warfare and human rights violations, previously unseen before the last half century. An example of this occurred during the Vietnam War. During the Vietnam War, Americans saw the live horrific images of war from their living rooms for the first time in history. Terrified at the sight of what our young men were doing overseas, people began to lose support for the war. While these clips of war and chaos initially generated shock, it no longer holds true. The perception of the continued bloodshed over the past decades, and wars, has now been altered. Nowadays the public has become so use to seeing the systematic violence in the world that they have become insensitive to it.
As previously stated, television has opened the eyes to millions of people around the world. As its image has spread, so has the violence portrayed through it. Studies now show that younger and younger viewers tune into the chaos of violence and murder shown on TV. This violence, as shown by studies, alters the young and undeveloped minds of adolescents to become immune to showing sympathy, fear, shock and other emotions towards violence. Contrary to these emotions, people are now growing up desensitized to violence and death and even echoing its usage in real life. This has shown that TV actually alters the mind into becoming use to violence, which in turn allows for the creation of violence in real life with limited pity or opposition. 
  
 Works Cited
-Norman, Herr. "Television & Health." The Sourcebook For Teaching Science. California State
University, n.d. Web. 27 Nov. 2011.
- "Violence in the Media." National Center for Children Exposed to Violence. Kaiser Family
Foundation, 16 Dec. 2005. Web. 27 Nov. 2011.

The Use of Animal Imagery in Dante’s Inferno


At the beginning of the Inferno, Dante already experiences the symbolic nature of animals. He is blocked on his path by three beasts; the lion, the she-wolf, and the leopard. These three animals represent the primitive temptations that block our path to God through sin. Throughout the Inferno, Dante repeatedly eludes to primitivity. Primitivity is the act of a human who follows animal instinct or characteristics. Dante constantly proclaims the sinners, as well as the punishers, to be animals. Therefore, Dante uses animal imagery to describe the primitive desires we have to sin and to show how, if left uncontrolled, they turn our souls into damnation and turn us away from our path towards God.
The first, and most forgivable, type of sin is that of incontinence. Incontinence is the lack of self-control over ones actions. Dante describes incontinence as falling into primitive desires like animals often do. These sins of lust, hunger, and wrath are considered animalistic in nature because they display a failure by humans to use their God-given minds to judge their actions. For this reason Dante feels pity for the sinners but ultimately still places them in Hell for failing to use the strength God gave them.  
In Canto VI the punisher, as well as the punished, are described as dog-like. Cerberus who oversees this level of Hell is seen as a dog-like monster because of his voice. The Gluttons who also reside in this level are said to howl in pain like a dog. This is symbolic of the fact that these sinners and Cerberus, who both consumed excessively, resemble the characteristics of dogs and their restless craving for food.
Canto IX contains one of many references to frogs. As the messenger from Heaven comes to the gates of Dis the sinners and demons are said to scatter like frogs. This shows how compared to the holy and heavenly messenger, the sinners are like worthless frogs who live in fear of the great enemy. Dante continues with his frog metaphor in Canto XXII when he compares the Barterers to sluggish frogs. Dante calls the Barterers frogs because they live in a boiling pitch and constantly try to poke their heads out like the snouts of a frog in a pond. These barterers are also compared to dolphins and otters because they constantly dip in and out of the pitch like that of these animals. The demons who guide Dante and Virgil through this level of Hell are also compared to an animal, this time it’s a hawk. The demons hover like hawks over a pond waiting for the frogs, or sinners, to surface and tear them apart. Dante uses the imagery of the hawks and frogs to show that the demons hover over the sinners who are degraded to nothing more than prey for the enjoyment of the demons.
In conclusion we see that Dante understood what it meant to sin. His philosophy suggests that God gave us a brain to be superior to animals in making rational decisions and use our free will to become closer to him and salvation. By using the sinners as metaphor to animals, Dante is stating that if we ignore our logic and free will and succumb to our animalistic temptation, we are failing God and wasting the gifts that he gave us. Therefore, Dante argues that if we continue to be like animals and not use our gifts, we will become like the condemned souls of Hell and be forced to live an eternity of torture and separation from God.