Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Reflecting on the Past
One World Trade Center, left, and nearby buildings are reflected in the glass of the glass façade of the National September 11 Museum in New York, in this file photo.”
This picture, featuring the new One World Trade Center, is an important artifact to recent American history because it depicts America’s resilience. Even though the original towers fell years ago, there is a new building slowing taking their place. Rebuilding in the wake of the tragedy that was 9/11 coincides with the narrative arc that Kurt Vonnegut spoke about “Man in a Hole.” Said plainly, the story goes like this: “somebody gets into trouble, gets out again” (349). This common story theme could be used to describe America after 9/11. We suffered the tragedy of the attack, fell into the proverbial hole, and now we are climbing back up the other side of that hole. We aren’t completely out yet, but we are getting there, as seen from the partially built One World Trade Center. In the drawing Vonnegut made of the “Man in Hole” story arc, the line doesn’t just go back to its original height. In the presentation, Kurt addresses this, saying, “It is not accidental that the line ends up higher than where it began” (349). After 9/11, we aren’t going to be where we were before, but we will be better. Not only are we rebuilding the World Trade Center, but we are building a newer, presumably better building. The new tower in the picture suggests that we can end up higher that before.
Years after the attack, another tower is rising up in the place of the twin towers. I think this shows how life goes on after 9/11. For a while the only thing at the site of Ground Zero was a pit of rubble. But we couldn’t just let it stay like that. We still needed a World Trade Center despite the old one falling. We went on working, and now we have a new one. However, it didn’t take this long for life to start going again. Even during the attack, life went on. An example would be the picture we discussed in class. In that picture, there is a delivery man walking with a package while the towers burn in the background. This man didn’t continue to work because he didn’t care about the tragedy, but because he had to. He had a job, and that needed to be done. America also followed a similar path: We were attacked, but we kept going. We kept working, and life went back to normal for many people.
Just because life went back to normal doesn’t mean that what happened didn’t matter. The museum serves as a reminder of the tragedy that happened that day. However, Foner tells us that 9/11 “drew new attention to essential American elements of the history of American freedom” (1069). Despite the fact that many people died, Foner finds another meaning to the attack, that it emphasized our freedom. Did we lose our freedom because of this attack? No. We lost a few civil liberties, but that’s an entirely different discussion. We kept going, we built another tower. We remained free after the attack. Our freedom showed that the attack didn’t change much in the long run. Foner goes on the say that “freedom is essential to American’s sense of themselves and as a nation” (1069). We didn’t lose our freedom, which is what identifies us as a nation. Fighting back physically against the people who perpetrated the attack may have been hard, but keeping our nation free may have been the best thing we could have done. We lost 3,000 people on 9/11, but despite the loss, we rebuilt the towers, stayed free, and will probably come out on top, above where we were before. The picture of the new tower represents all these things, and for that, is an important artifact in recent American history.
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