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Will 'Neda' Video Become Icon for Ages?

By ANDRA VARIN
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AOL News
posted: 137 DAYS 2 HOURS AGO
comments: 119
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(June 25) -- Her death was seen around the world. An attractive young woman in blue jeans lies helpless on the pavement, blood gushing from her mouth and nose. The video made "Neda" an instant symbol of the Iranian protests.
But what if Neda had been ugly? Or overweight? Would she still have become the heroine of a movement? And will the grainy images of her death, taken from crude amateur video, earn a place in the pantheon of news iconography?
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"It's always impossible to predict history," said Karen Sternheimer, a sociology professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. "I think that one of the things that makes this image so powerful is that it's almost an illicit image. It's the picture we weren't supposed to see."
The Iranian regime certainly did not want anyone to see what happened to Neda Agha Soltan. Foreign journalists have been prevented from reporting on the post-election turmoil in Tehran. People have managed to transmit photos, video and messages via a host of online networks, but there is no way to independently confirm the information.
The Neda video circulated first on social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook instead of being vetted by mainstream media. Thanks to such networks, "we are all kind of eyewitnesses now," said Sternheimer.
"You don't have to get something aired on CNN to get attention. These kinds of images don't have to go through a gatekeeper," she said.
Nevertheless, the fact that cable networks and more traditional media ran the images gave the video more weight.
"I think as a first draft of history, because it was picked up by so many news sources, it really did add to its power or impact," Sternheimer said. "A lot of people don’t go on YouTube or the Internet."
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That Neda's death was caught on video, not by a still photograph, isn't really that new a trend. The 1991 videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King by Los Angeles police officers triggered an uproar. Many of the clashes of the civil rights movement were filmed as well.
Neda isn't the first image to come to represent a movement. In 1970, the Kent State massacre became a pivotal moment in American opposition to the Vietnam War, thanks in large part to a photo of a 14-year-old girl screaming as she kneels beside the body of a student gunned down by the Ohio National Guard.
The image of the distraught girl helped change the mindset of many Americans who had dismissed the anti-war movement as just some hippie, counterculture disturbance.
"Her shock and upsetness is not the picture of a dedicated revolutionary trying to kill American troops. That's the picture of someone who had no idea this could happen That's the picture of innocence assaulted," said Robert J.S. Ross, a sociology professor at Clark University in Worcester, Mass.
In 1989, another protest image that became etched in America's consciousness was that of "Tank Man" -- a single protester facing down a line of tanks in Beijing during the communist government’s crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square.
"It appeals to something that's very American, and that's individualism" said Ross. "Here's this lone guy courageously confronting a tank -- and the tank stops. That's 'High Noon,' Gary Cooper."
To go down in history, an image has to be widely disseminated and repeated over and over again. And it has to capture the mood of the audience.
"Icons work because they tap into our worries, our anxieties. They are something we can form our fears around," said David Lubin, Charlotte C. Weber Professor of Art at Wake Forest University in North Carolina.
And the image doesn’t have to be sad or scary. Lubin cites the famous Alfred Eisenstaedt photo of an exuberant soldier kissing a nurse in New York's Time Square to celebrate the end of World War II.
An image is usually more effective if it features a woman or child.
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Embedded video from CNN Video
"We create the martyrs that we need at any given moment," said Lubin. "[But] people want her to be beautiful. That's part of the great mythos."
He suggests some of that need for a heroine may date back to Renaissance paintings of the Madonna and Child, or the Virgin Mary mourning the crucified Jesus in a Pieta. "In icon heaven, women in extremis play best."
Sternheimer also thinks Neda's good looks helped make her a posthumous star. "Because she was so pretty, I think for a lot of people it draws even more sympathy. She appeared very Westernized. I think for people in the West, they can think, 'She’s just like anyone I know.'"
Lubin points to another beautiful young woman who captured the public's heart in the center of a tragedy: Jacqueline Kennedy following the November 1963 assassination of her husband, President John F. Kennedy.
"Jackie had amazing presence of mind to use the opportunity," said Lubin, author of the book 'Shooting Kennedy: JFK and the Culture of Images' (University of California Press, 2003).
"The whole funeral that she orchestrated was a really important piece of political theater," designed to evoke the image of Camelot and assure Americans "that higher values were going to prevail," he said.
But although the grieving first lady recognized an opportunity and seized it, that doesn't mean you can intentionally create an iconic image. In fact, attempts to do so could backfire –- such as the moment on May 1, 2003, when President George W. Bush landed on the deck of an aircraft carrier and, with a banner proclaiming "Mission Accomplished" in the background, declared an end to major combat in Iraq. Although Bush didn’t know it at the time, the fighting was far from over.
Since no one knows what will happen next in Iraq, it's hard to tell whether Neda's death throes will become a lasting image, or be forgotten in the months to come.
"In part it has to do with what happens to this movement," said Ross. "If there's some really big change in the political structure, she will become a heroine, a martyr to the cause. Should this movement go away without having a real impact in the regime, then it wouldn't surprise me if she became merely a local figure."
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2009-06-24 22:02:40

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YoKoach

03:23 PMJun 30 2009

"what if neda had been unattractive?" or overweight?" REally? as if the pictures of the skeletal like kids from iconic Vietnam War were 'beautiful children'..... ugly is ugly and the situation is ugly regardless of whose picture is being shown as a consequence in this photo.... it doesn't make death more memorable to have it be someone pretty... it's death for crap's sake and death....ain't pretty...

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amandarogers1980

02:49 PMJun 28 2009

When I think of a young woman who gave the ultimate sacrice in the name of love and freedom in the mideast, I only think of Rachel Corrie

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Tb1vb1

01:49 AMJun 28 2009

JUST A REMINDER THE AXIS OF EVIL AT WORK,AND THEY CALLED GEORGE BUSH AN IDIOT,THERE REALLY IS EVIL IN THIS WORLD AND IT IS NOT CONCERVITIVES OR LIBREALS,THE EVIL IS OUR ENEMIES,OPEN YOUR EYES BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE.LONG LIV AMERICA AND ISREAL.

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I BABINI

03:15 PMJun 27 2009

THE CULTURE OF IRAN HAS BEEN OBJECT OF MUCH REJECTION FROM THE AMERICAN PEOPLE--AND VICE VERSA, OUR CULTURA HAS BEEN EXTREMELLY CRITIZED BY THE IRAN CULTURE....SO......WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?????>>>>>""IN ROME THE ITALIANS DO AS THE PEOPLE IN ROME DOES......:" NO OTHER SOLUTION.

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Fakeconomics100

08:59 PMJun 27 2009

NEDA'S life will not be wasted----------Get rid off those pathetic cleric who are looting your country----------No more Mullahs and Ayotollahs?

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(3)

Fakeconomics100

08:57 PMJun 27 2009

It is about time for Iranians to get rid off their welfare idiots MULLAHS and AYOTOLLAHS-----------They are literally looting their country----------They have no skills that will be useful in rebuilding IRAN-------Hey Iranians?? Why are you waiting? Just get rid off thet welfare culture!!!!!!!! Liberate yourselves from the greedy and cruel cleric---

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Scottkettle815

08:05 PMJun 27 2009

Neda was not looking at anything in particular. Her body was enduring a catastrophic and horribly painful death, and in that state, all of her movements and actions were involuntary. Her eyes were open, but not truly seeing or focusing on anything because her brain was busy trying to cope with surviving the terrible wound. Until she died. Neda is already an icon. My atheist heart will never forget watching this human being die.

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Dolphininc

07:11 PMJun 26 2009

BARTSTEW...I feel sorry for your true lack of knowledge/ignorance. While sending toops to Afganistan, he is creating ways to fund Hamas. Back to your ignorance...My post was that we can not remember our own tragedies, much less those of the world. If you could pull your head out of your butt and quit hating do to your insecurities or is it the lack of size...Humans in general today have a problem remembering the terrible things that are happening very long. The truth is now masked with new words or distorted what really happened. Your hate of Bush that kept you safe for the years in office is amazing! Too bad you are blinded with hate to understand what other people are trying to say...get some help...please!

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Ahammerjack

07:06 PMJun 26 2009

hixlou your comment sucks iran should nuke isreal and get it over with JEWS SUCK if you wear jesus around your neck i hope that jewboy chokes you to death azzhole the world is this way because trash like you

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(6)

Bill1955xchs

07:06 PMJun 26 2009

None of this would have happened if those students/others would have just followed the orders of the Supreme Leader as they should have. But NO they wouldn't follow orders so beatings and death is what they get.

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Her death was seen around the world. An attractive young woman in blue jeans lies helpless on the pavement, blood gushing from her mouth and nose. The video made “Neda” an instant symbol of the Iranian protests.