Beyond the Towers: September 11, 2001 Watching the Past & Present to Understand the Surveilled Future

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2023-12-22

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Abstract

September 11, 2023, marked twenty-two years since the tragedy of 9/11. In this project, I examine the stories that are told and remembered to date about the September 11 attacks on the United States of America and the subsequent events that followed. After the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were tragically attacked on September 11, 2001, many media outlets began highlighting the significance of the attack, capturing the magnitude of the events. This project will look at what is memorialized, remembered, and cemented across the 22 years in our social memory of 9/11. I will further explore what is rooted in politics and memorials, shaped through the media. Through the historical narrative of celebrations of 9/11, looking at memory, memorialization, fear, and what lies ahead for the surveilled future ultimately assesses the forever remembrance of 9/11 in media and memorials and how memory operates to influence Americans' view of safety.

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Shubrick, Jordyn (2023). Beyond the Towers: September 11, 2001 Watching the Past & Present to Understand the Surveilled Future. Capstone project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30368.


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