Introduction
Throughout July and August of 2014, as numerous media outlets in the UK, US, and elsewhere publicised mortality statistics on a daily basis, it was difficult not to be bombarded with the numbers of those killed and injured in the conflict in Gaza. In conjunction with its televised reports, the BBC ran online features exploring the ‘toll of operations in Gaza’.Footnote 1 Israel’s oldest daily newspaper, Haaretz, released ‘live updates’ of fatalities for each numbered day of the crisis,Footnote 2 while The New York Times published both ‘The Toll in Gaza and Israel Day by Day’ and a daily running total of the dead (both Israeli and Gazan).Footnote 3 Alongside the body counts, however, something else was happening. Sometimes clandestinely, sometimes openly, scribbled on walls or listed in advertisements, occasionally the source of legal wrangling, or the prompt for charitable fund-raising, concerted efforts were under way, particularly on social media, to name the dead of Gaza publically.
It is this contestation over the representation of Gaza’s dead that I investigate in this article.Footnote 4 I am interested, in particular, in why naming is regarded as preferable to statistical accounting as a way to record death. I take as my focal point the idea of the ‘human’. I have two reasons for this. First, ways of representing the dead (as named individuals or as statistical abstractions) are symptomatic of the workings of what Judith Butler has called grievability, described, by her, as ‘a condition of life’s emergence and sustenance’.Footnote 5 Grievability links etymologically with grief and, by inference, with death; thus what is often stressed in research on grievability is how the dead are represented, for example, in obituaries, newspaper reports, and the like. But grievability is not a synonym for grief or for death; it is a way to think about liveability. An order of grievability, I argue (and I explicate this concept more fully below) certainly determines how different deaths are hierarchically ranked and how those deaths figure, if at all, in public discourse. But crucially it also governs which lives matter, thus regulating who is deemed fully – that is meaningfully – human, in the specific sense of having a life judged worthy of value, support, and protection. It is this sense of the human, where being human signifies being grievable qua having a life that counts, that I deploy in this article.Footnote 6
Second, the human, I argue, is also a category openly invoked by subaltern groups to make political claims. The term functions as a means to stage a political dispute: to contest specific modalities of exclusion, subordination, or dehumanisation and thereby to enact equality. And Gaza was no exception. One of the initiatives examined in this article, Humanize Palestine, articulates its efforts to name the dead explicitly by way of the human, an idea it summons (invoking the first sense of the human noted above) when it asserts ‘that a Palestinian life is no less valuable than the life of another’.Footnote 7 What interests me here is the politics of the human entailed when, in order to make the lives of particular peoples matter, the category of the human is appropriated as, what Jacques Rancière calls, a ‘litigious’ name.Footnote 8
To do so, I focus on a series of efforts to name the dead of Gaza. My position is that, politically, not all efforts at nomination are equivalent. A distinction needs to be drawn between nominalising actions undertaken by privileged or protected others and those undertaken by subaltern populations. For all the laudable aspirations that might drive the former, such initiatives, I submit, treat humanity as a status conferred on one party by another; leave unexamined the questions of power and authority at work here; assume a logic of assimilation; and fail to problematise the norm of humanisation in play. In contrast, those activities engaged in by the ‘ungrievable’ (to borrow Butler’s expression) involve a performative politics, in which the ungrievable themselves enact their humanity and grievability by appropriating the very category, the human, from which they are excluded. They do so not in order to demonstrate that they fit an existing (normative) category of the human nor to seek inclusion within an existing order of grievability. Politically, they strive to make themselves count, rather, by disrupting and reconfiguring the prevailing order of grievability, thereby subverting and resignifying what it means to be human.
The article is structured in four parts. In the first part, I return to my opening examples of the conflict in Gaza to consider the nature of these interventions and the purposes they ostensibly serve in naming the dead, drawing attention in particular to the charge that treating Palestinian deaths in statistical terms is dehumanising. Since the ‘Western’ media, usually referred to generically rather than being specified, sometimes including and sometimes excluding the Israeli press,Footnote 9 was identified by some campaigns as responsible for perpetrating this dehumanisation, in the second part I explore briefly the role of the media in propagating a ‘hierarchy of death’.Footnote 10 Useful as this concept is in illuminating the ranking of deaths of different populations, it is not sufficient to capture all that the idea of grievability connotes. So here I elaborate the concept of an order of grievability employed in this article, suggesting how it conditions the representation of Gazan deaths as nameless statistics.
The third and fourth parts of the article return to the efforts to name the dead discussed in part one in order to explore the politics they entail. Part three focuses on the acts of nominalisation carried out on behalf of the people of Gaza, considering both their purpose and their primary audience. I argue that although they attempt to demonstrate that Gazan lives matter and, as such, should not be discounted out of hand, they are nevertheless limited politically in three ways; first, in their focus, which is to alter the perceptions of a specific audience towards the people of Gaza rather than engaging directly with them. Second, they occasion a politics that rests on inequality; one conducted by the relatively secure and privileged towards the vulnerable. Thirdly, that their logic treats humanity as a status granted by one party to another. Not only does this appear to suggest that a life is meaningful only when and if the powerful acknowledge it as such; intentionally or otherwise, it positions subaltern populations as passive victims awaiting the intervention of others.
Part four explores what I am calling a critical politics of the human. This is a performative politics centred on the actions of the ungrievable as they claim grievability, and thus humanity, for themselves. To illustrate what such a politics looks like I explore the activities of Humanize Palestine in both naming the dead of Gaza and in asserting that their lives matter. I am interested in the ways that performatively invoking the name of the human, in such a setting, enables the ungrievable, firstly, to counter their designation as ungrievable as defined within a particular order of grievability and, secondly, to constitute themselves as resistant political subjects.
‘Once upon a time, they used to have names, and faces’Footnote 11
Over a three-day period during July, the Tumblr blog ‘names on walls’ posted photographs of graffiti scrawled by an unnamed Israeli or Israelis on walls in Be’er Shiva, Israel, naming some of the Palestinians killed in the first five days of the Gaza conflict.Footnote 12 That same month, reacting to what it considered to be, ‘contrary to the IBA’s [Israeli Broadcast Authority] own rules’,Footnote 13 the failure of domestic news programmes in Israel to broadcast the names of Palestinian fatalities, Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem produced its own ninety-second radio advertisement called ‘The children of Gaza have a name’ offering a ‘partial list’ of the children killed in the first weeks of the conflict.Footnote 14 B’Tselem’s attempts to buy a spot on IBA Radio to air the advertisement were refused on the basis that it was ‘politically controversial’.Footnote 15 In response, B’Tselem uploaded the advertisement to Facebook where ‘within hours’, it claims, it was listened to by ‘almost 300,000 people’ and ‘shared more than 900 times’.Footnote 16
On 28 July, the US-based Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) and the Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU) released a video on YouTube, as part of its Freedom for Palestine: #GazaNames Project, in which various ‘celebrities, artists, and activists’ (including American Jews and Palestinians) held up signs with the names and ages of Palestinian dead.Footnote 17 The video and accompanying website encouraged others to ‘take action’ by submitting ‘a photo of how you choose to resist, or the name of the person you want to memorialize’.Footnote 18 In early August, the charity Save the Children placed a full page advertisement in several UK national newspapers entitled ‘In Memory of the 373 Children Killed in Gaza 8 July – 3 August 2014’ that listed their names.Footnote 19
The summer also saw the launch of two crowdsourcing ventures: the first, Beyond Numbers, describes itself as a ‘global initiative powered by a group of youth from around the world, based across five continents [sic] (Africa, Asia, Europe, South America, North America)’ with a platform ‘regularly updated by Palestinians living in the conflict zone’. Sub-titled ‘People Beyond Numbers’, it aims to remember ‘the Victims of Israeli Operation “Protective Edge” on Gaza’Footnote 20 by collecting and posting ‘the names, images and stories of those [Palestinians] that have lost their lives’.Footnote 21 The second, Humanize Palestine, was a ‘community effort’ set up in response to the killing, by three Israelis, of Palestinian teenager Mohammad Abu Khedir.Footnote 22 Its online memorials attempt ‘to honor the deceased as martyrs by bringing them back to life through their pictures, stories, art, and poetry’.Footnote 23
Although all of these interventions were united by their efforts to name the dead, their reasons for doing so differed. The graffiti artist(s) whose activism is documented by ‘names on walls’ is reported as daubing ‘the names in an effort to change the anonymous nature of those killed’.Footnote 24 The rationale behind Save the Children’s poster is made clear in the statement from its Chief Executive, Justin Forsyth, which accompanied its launch:
To see the names of the children, some as young as a few months, written in stark black and white brings home the tragedy that has befallen Gaza’s children. One child’s death is too many; 373 is an outrage that is a stain on the world’s conscience. We condemn all indiscriminate attacks on civilians in Gaza and Israel and by publishing these names we are reminding the world of the urgent need to push for a permanent ceasefire. We must ensure that no more young lives are needlessly sacrificed.Footnote 25
The poster was part of the charity’s campaign, ‘Gaza and Israel Conflict: Stop Killing Children’,Footnote 26 calling on the international community to help resolve the conflict in the region on behalf of all its children, Palestinian and Israeli alike.Footnote 27
The press release accompanying the launch of the #GazaNames video described it as part of a political initiative ‘speaking out for Palestinian human rights’ and expressing ‘support for Palestinian freedom, equality and justice’ in the face of ‘Israel’s disproportionate attack on the Palestinian people’ in Gaza.Footnote 28 In the words of Rebecca Vilkomerson, executive director of Jewish Voice for Peace, the video offered a ‘platform for the growing list of prominent individuals who are outraged by Israel’s brutal violence against Gaza’s civilian population’.Footnote 29 Similar sentiments lie behind Beyond Numbers. Its efforts to remember ‘all innocent victims of the Israeli Operation “Protective Edge” on Gaza’ were driven by a desire to ‘inspire the world to take action and call for the end of the violence’ and by its commitment to ‘a free and unoccupied Palestine’.Footnote 30
For all their diversity, one concern was shared by several campaigns. It relates to the ‘Western’ and Israeli news media’s ‘routinized reporting’ of Gaza’s dead as abstractions – ‘as x numbers killed and y numbers wounded’.Footnote 31 ‘The mothers, fathers, sons and daughters who’ve been killed are not numbers … Each one has a name, an age, a story’ announces the voiceover in the #GazaNames video. Beyond Numbers writes of the need to portray ‘a victim and his/her story, rather than as a number to add to the death count’. Explaining why this is necessary, the website authors contend that ‘Due to the absence of transparent reporting in the region, news about the fallen is narrowly focused on numbers and often fails to include personal details about those who have lost their lives’.Footnote 32 B’Tselem Executive Director, Hagai El-Ad, reflects similarly on the alleged reluctance of the Israeli media specifically to report ‘on the persons killed in Gaza, other than noting the general number of casualties’.Footnote 33 B’Tselem is not alone, though, in expressing disquiet about its alleged reluctance of the Israeli media to name names. In an article in Haaretz, journalist Asher Schechter discussing B’Tselem’s advertisement, notes that ‘Every person has a name, yes, but it turns out not all names are worthy of being read on [Israeli] TV.’Footnote 34 ‘[A]s the list of dead children grew’, he notes, in the news ‘most remained nameless casualties. Mere statistics, disputed statistics.’Footnote 35
The founders of Humanize Palestine, Dana Saifan and Bayan Abusneineh, make parallel claims about the Western media, lamenting its continued reduction of ‘Palestinians to numbers’.Footnote 36 Writing about the initiative, Abusneineh expresses concerns that ‘Palestinians are portrayed through the media as nothing more than a death toll’,Footnote 37 continuing ‘We don’t know anything about them.’ As such, the media constructs Palestinians as persons with ‘forgettable names’;Footnote 38 aligns ‘Palestinian bodies with death and disposability’;Footnote 39 and engages in the ‘dehumanization and “othering” of Palestinians’:Footnote 40 a judgement shared by Beyond Numbers whose website similarly describes Western reporting as ‘dehumanizing the Palestinians and their cause’.Footnote 41
In the next section, therefore, I consider briefly what is at stake in Western news coverage of the struggle in Gaza, before setting out what I mean by an order of grievability. My aim here is not to present an in-depth analysis of how the conflict was handled; this article is not primarily an examination of reporting practices of the media (‘Western’ or Israeli) in relation to Gaza, specifically, or the Middle East, in general. It focuses on the politics of the human entailed by efforts, such as those documented here, to claim grievability for subaltern populations, to make their lives matter, in contexts where they appear not to. Understanding how the media report their deaths is fundamental to understanding how grievability operates in this geopolitical context.
Ordering grievability
The observation that the deaths of different populations are reported publically in diverse ways is not new.Footnote 42 From at least the late 1990s onwards, academic commentators have repeatedly pointed to what Roy Greenslade labelled the media’s ‘hierarchy of death’.Footnote 43 This is a transnational hierarchy in which (variously) ‘foreign deaths always rank below domestic deaths … deaths at home provide human interest stories that people want to know about, while the deaths of foreigners are merely statistics’;Footnote 44 women’s deaths count for more than men’s, particularly if they are young and white; race and class impact on the volume of reporting;Footnote 45 and deaths in an ‘ongoing conflict always receive less coverage than unexpected deaths elsewhere’.Footnote 46 Or, in an alternative geographically-inflected formulation, a ‘hierarchy of the dead’ where:Footnote 47 ‘One dead fireman in Brooklyn is worth five English bobbies, who are worth 50 Arabs, who are worth 500 Africans.’Footnote 48
The mainstream media’s tendency (in Britain, the US, and Israel) throughout the summer of 2014, therefore, to record Gaza’s dead primarily in numerical terms appears to be evidence of just such a hierarchy. Because violent death in the region, particularly amongst Palest/inians, is regarded as unexceptional, even normal, the death of a Gazan, unless it is extraordinary or unexpected in some way, is treated as ‘just another statistic in an old story with too many tragedies’; a story in this case about non-white, non-‘Western’ foreigners.Footnote 49
Describing a hierarchy of death, however, is not the same as explaining how it is produced. Hitherto media scholars have tended to point in explanation to factors such as: the proximity (geopolitical, cultural, economic, linguistic, and political) of the death-event in question; the presence or absence of a news desk in a particular location; restrictions placed on reporting by governments or other controlling interests; the ‘newsworthiness’ of a story; whether the incident is a natural disaster; whether it involves women and/or children; whether it results from violence; the number of tourists affected; as well as other strategic and historical considerations.Footnote 50 I want to pursue a different line of inquiry centred on the human. My contention is that the rank ordering of deaths just alluded to, operationalised via the factors just listed, is indicative of the existence and ongoing operation of, what I am calling, an order of grievability and the norms that configure it.
The notion of an ‘order’ I borrow from Rancière’s idea of the ‘police order’, which he describes in Disagreement as ‘an order of bodies that defines the allocation of … ways of doing, ways of being, and ways of saying’.Footnote 51 This order of bodies is hierarchical and inegalitarian, determining, amongst other things, who has a part in society and who does not, whose speech is audible as meaningful speech and whose is not, and what kinds of activity are visible and which are not. I derive the idea of grievability from Butler who develops it as a way to explain the variable value attaching to different lives, where only some warrant security, care, and support. I thus understand grievability as the ‘presupposition’ for liveable, that is, ‘fully human’, lives.Footnote 52 Taken together, an order of grievability refers to the hierarchical organisation of who counts as a fully human subject and thus whose lives matter. As Butler surmises in Frames of War, however, the ability to perceive someone as grievable depends on their life being recognisable as a life. Each order of grievability depends, therefore, on ‘the normative production of ontology’.Footnote 53
To refer to ontology as normatively produced is to construe it as historically contingent and social. It is to argue that ontological claims are, in fact, ‘naturalized effect[s] of political configurations’ rather than pre-linguistic, pre-given, or natural entities independent of social and political organisation.Footnote 54 Butler demonstrates this clearly in Gender Trouble when she explores how, through the operations of the ‘heterosexual matrix’, gender naturalises binary sex as an ontological category. As such, an ontology is not a foundation; it is a ‘normative injunction’ that sets limits to cultural intelligibility,Footnote 55 conditioning what is apprehensible as ‘real’ and who qualifies as fully human. It is a regulatory and ‘regulated domain’, operating through norms (of race, gender, corporeal morphology, ethnicity, and so forth),Footnote 56 to produce hierarchical and exclusionary effects privileging certain persons or populations over others.Footnote 57 Ontologies, understood thus, are historically determined and culturally delimited, inseparable from the social and political contexts in which they are embedded, and temporally and spatially particular. They are, furthermore, fully imbricated in power relations.
As regards grievability, the normative production of ontology is visible, for Butler, in the way that certain dead persons, particularly non-Western others (her listings include ‘Palestinians’, ‘Afghan peoples’, ‘Arab peoples’, ‘practitioners of Islam’,Footnote 58 and ‘Iraqis’),Footnote 59 do not qualify for obituaries and or other forms of public recognition by the media. This is because their lives are not apprehended as lives in any meaningful sense. As persons they have no claim on grievability, in other words, because they do not enjoy ontological status as fully human.Footnote 60 Also, the reason their lives are not (re)cognisable epistemologically as lives is because ontology delimits what counts as ‘real’. To categorise a particular population as having a diminished claim to the human is thus to claim that, in terms of the specific ontology in operation, it fails to meet the norms that define what that involves. This means that the ‘termination’ of lives that are constituted as unreal – are derealised – by normative ontology, as Maja Zehfuss observes, are ‘something less than killing’.Footnote 61
When I talk, therefore, of an order of grievability I am not only referring to the kind of comparative ranking of fatalities captured in descriptors such as those noted earlier, hierarchies of death or the dead. I am referring, over and above this, to the particular normative ontology on which a specific distribution of grievability is based, which determines who is fully human (and thus whose lives matter), and to the epistemological entailments that follow on from this ontology.Footnote 62 This includes not only the norms conditioning public discourse (normalising, for instance, how the deaths of certain populations are represented and the language used to describe them) but also those moulding subjects’ views of the world, framing what it is possible for them to see, to hear, and to say: which violent deaths, for instance, are visible as violent and which are not, whose appeals for support are audible as appeals for support and whose are not, and whose deaths might be spoken about publically and whose not.
So far, this article has discussed orders of grievability largely in the singular. However, care needs to be taken here. In her discussion of ‘hierarchies of grief’,Footnote 63 Zehfuss quite rightly takes issue with Butler’s overly simplistic division between ‘highly protected Western lives’ and ‘disposable non-Western lives’ (or rather ‘non-Western non-lives’). She demonstrates that what Butler presents as a ‘general truth’ – that non-Western lives are ungrievable – is, actually, a ‘point about public discourse in the United States, or perhaps in the West more broadly’.Footnote 64 Zehfuss also criticises Butler’s failure to acknowledge that, in fact, even in the terms of Western public discourse, the very populations Butler alleges are ungrievable are sometimes grieved. Here Zehfuss draws attention to the work of organisations such as Iraq Body Count in publicising the deaths of so-called ‘ungrievable’ non-Western populations.Footnote 65 Finally, she adds to Butler’s account by exploring, what she refers to as, ‘an intriguing omission’ from the latter’s discussions: the existence of a particular set of grievable Western lives whose deaths (like those of the ungrievable) are ‘accepted as a matter of course’, namely those of the armed forces.Footnote 66
What criticisms such as Zehfuss’s reveal is that it does not make sense to talk of grievability simpliciter; a particular population is only grievable (or ungrievable) within a specific order of grievability. This is true of the Palestinian populations that are my concern in this article. They are not ungrievable, per se. In fact, many of their deaths were reported, by broadcasters such as Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya News, and Al-Alam, in newspapers such as Al-Akhbar, or announced on radio by, for instance, the Ajyal Radio Network, where they were mourned (and I will return to this later) as singular, irreplaceable, individuals, whose lives mattered. Rather they are ungrievable within the particular order reflected in and perpetuated by the mainstream Western (including Israeli) media, where their deaths, if they figure at all, are chronicled en masse, anonymously and arithmetically. For this reason, it is important to be aware that, globally, at any one time, plural orders of grievability exist.
There are three final points to note about orders of grievability. First, while within any particular order a broad distinction will exist between those who are grievable and those who are not, gradations exist. There will be lives that matter more than others amongst the grievable, as Zehfuss has shown, and lives that matter even less amongst the ungrievable, African lives compared to Arab lives to recall Moeller’s observation. Moreover, the division is not fixed once and for all. Depending on circumstances, a different ranking might prevail; for example, in some conditions a heteronormative hierarchy placing heterosexual lives as more valuable than gay, lesbian, or transsexual lives might preponderate. In another situation, civilian lives might be regarded as more valuable than military lives. Or, as in the discussion at hand, the issue might have transnational implications, as when non-‘Western’ lives count for less than ‘Western’ lives.
Next, orders of grievability depend for their continued functioning on what Foucault calls diverse ‘forms for transmission and diffusion’,Footnote 67 including reiteration through mechanisms such as public policy (foreign and domestic), the ‘social and political organizations that have developed historically to maximize precariousness for some and minimize precariousness for others’,Footnote 68 and/or the kinds of media discourse relevant here. This latter point is important. My claim in this article is not that the media originate or generate hierarchies of death ab initio; the media is simply one of the mechanisms through which norms of grievability circulate and are reiterated. Lastly, while ordering grievability is almost certainly inevitable in any society, no order is natural or inexorable; all are historically and culturally contingent. Because of which, and this is important to my discussion later on, any determinate order has the potential to be contested; to be interrupted, disrupted, or even reconfigured.
So far in this section, I have identified the kinds of hierarchy discernible in media coverage of violent death pertinent to the context at hand, have argued that they are symptomatic of the workings of a particular order of grievability, and have defined what I mean by that term. I have also intimated that multiple, intersecting norms of humanisation (including those of gender, sex, ethnicity, and race) are at play in the production of lives that matter – grievable lives. There is, of course, one other factor that is relevant: in the Western media’s reporting of death ‘humans’ have names while, according to Beyond Numbers and Humanize Palestine, those who have been dehumanised do not. They are treated as brute statistics. What interests me is how their ‘dehumanization’ through de-nomination might be countered; specifically, how ‘those of no account’ (to borrow Rancière’s phrase) might come to count.Footnote 69 At this juncture, therefore, I return to the initiatives discussed at the beginning of the article to consider the politics of the human discernible in their nominating activities. Here I will explore the distinction set out in my introduction between political interventions carried out on behalf of the ungrievable and those directly involving them.
Naming the unnamed
If failing to name the dead is dehumanising, then it might reasonably be assumed that to name them is to humanise them, to make their lives matter. Reflecting on Chilean artist Alfredo Jaar’s The Rwanda Project,Footnote 70 for instance, Jacques Rancière pinpoints the power of visual art to ‘make seen what cannot be seen’,Footnote 71 observing:
What is not visible, what had to be made visible, was that the victims of this mass murder were all individuals. They had to be given their name, an inscription in the order of discourse and memorial, because indifference to those deaths in fact prolongs a certain invisibility, the feeling that these lives are external to the world of discourse.Footnote 72
What concerns Rancière (here and elsewhere) is ‘indifference’; indifference towards the fate of ‘those living beings who already did not affect us, individuals whose names were meaningless to us’.Footnote 73 It is precisely to sensitise us to their stories and to redistribute ‘the way we count’, as he puts it, that their ‘names have to be made visible’.Footnote 74 Likewise Butler’s speculation about what happens ‘when we attempt to name, and so bring under the rubric of the “human”’ those ‘we are asked not to mourn’,Footnote 75 would appear to suggest that publically naming the dead is an appropriate political means to surmount the problem of their namelessness and invisibility. Indeed, she provides further support for this position when she observes how the ‘utterance of a name can come as the most extraordinary form of recognition, especially when one has become nameless’.Footnote 76 As regards the politics of the human, however, a distinction needs to be drawn in my view between nominalising acts carried out by the emplaced on behalf of a particular population, or some subset thereof, and those orchestrated or actively engaged in by subaltern populations themselves.Footnote 77 There are three reasons for this.
First, the primary goal of many of the interventions previously detailed was to change the consciousness of a particular population (British, Israeli, American, or ‘Western’) towards the plight of the people of Gaza rather than acknowledging the humanity of the latter directly. The Israeli human rights organisation, B’Tselem, for instance, sought to challenge the failure – or refusal – of the IBA to broadcast the names of Palestinians killed in Gaza by producing its own advertisement in Hebrew; thus endeavouring to draw to the attention of the Israeli public what had, in its view, been ‘effectively silenced and erased from the public sphere’, a ‘human issue of utmost, urgent political importance’.Footnote 78 Similarly, the graffitiing of names of Palestinian dead on the walls of Be’er Shiva was directed foremost at its inhabitants, predominantly Jewish, in an effort, as one Israeli journalist wrote, to ‘remind … us of what we really want to forget’.Footnote 79 Save the Children’s poster originally appeared in British daily newspapers: The Independent, the i, The Times, The Guardian, and The Telegraph. It was devised, as a spokeswoman for the British-based charity notes ‘to keep the children who have suffered in this war at the forefront of everyone’s mind’,Footnote 80 the ‘everyone’ in question being presumably members of the British public.Footnote 81
Even so, we might still want to argue that despite their diversity, all of these efforts to name the dead are committed to the idea that Gazan lives matter; that they are – or ought to be – grievable. The trouble however, and this is my second concern, is that when such humanising efforts are practised in conditions of inequality, where inegalitarian power relations prevail as they do in the present context, as Didier Fassin notes, what follows is a ‘politics of inequality’, ‘directed from above to below, from the more powerful to the weaker, the more fragile, the more vulnerable’.Footnote 82 This is a politics that rests on the same asymmetrical ‘relation of domination’ that facilitates the discounting of the lives of the latter in the first place.Footnote 83 Understood thus, humanness-qua-grievability is treated as a status, even a gift, bestowed by the already-human (the geopolitically privileged) on and received by the not-yet-human (populations in positions of heightened vulnerability, insecurity, and precarity). This has two effects. It implies that a life is meaningful only when the already human, the emplaced or the privileged, declare it to be. This is particularly problematic where the West is involved; for as critics such as Mark Franke, Sunera Thobani and others have shown, it risks perpetuating a particular racial and imperialist dynamic.Footnote 84 It also presents subaltern populations as passively awaiting admittance to the category of the human and not as resistive political actors asserting humanity in their own right.
Thirdly, although nominalising initiatives such as those undertaken by #GazaNames, B’Tselem, and others, might help temporarily to reorder a specific hierarchy of death, such that Palestinian lives are recast as more worthy than they once were, in and of themselves, they do little to contest the norms by which the human (the life that matters) is defined and, thus, to trouble the reigning order of grievability. They do not, for example, interrogate the privilege attaching to the lives that matter (white Western lives, for instance), problematise the specific mechanisms through which naming as a norm of humanisation takes place, or query which particular institutions or organs within that order are authorised to bestow or refuse grievability on others.Footnote 85 In this sense, they extend, rather than subject to critique, existing indices of grievability and humanising norms, with the effect that subaltern populations are simply incorporated within and assimilated to the existing order of grievability when the powerful deign they might be.Footnote 86
Towards a critical politics of the human
In the final part of this article, therefore, I want to explore the politics of the human in what might be called its critical mode by focusing on what happens when the ungrievable themselves assert their humanity. In particular, I am interested in how such an assertion might potentially lead to a reconfiguration of the order of grievability. My argument in what follows is that, provisionally, a politics of the human is more likely to have transformative effects, firstly, when it involves, what Fiona Jenkins in a different context aptly calls, ‘an event of contestation’,Footnote 87 leading to what Butler suggestively describes as ‘an insurrection at the level of ontology’.Footnote 88 A critical politics of the human, in other words, will be one that puts into question the sphere of appearance of the human; that is, our sense of ‘reality’ and the ‘normal’. It will seek to rupture the normative ontology, in other words, that disallows the ungrievable ontological status as human. Next, unlike the appeals, discussed in the previous section, that petition another, in this case the media, to name those whom it does not routinely name, to humanise them that is, a critical politics will enact that humanity directly. It will arrogate to itself the authority to determine that subaltern lives matter. Lastly, a critical politics of the human, as already hinted, will involve resistive, political actions by the ungrievable themselves. It will rest on their performative assertion of their own humanity.
As the earlier exploration of orders of grievability revealed, the ability to see others as grievable is shaped and consolidated by socially articulated and historically variable norms that constitute only some persons as fully human and thus visible within a given order of grievability. The dehumanisation of those excluded ontologically from that order means they are neither perceptible nor apprehensible as normatively human, thus their lives are of no particular account. This is what renders them ungrievable. In order to claim grievability, therefore, ungrievable populations or persons need somehow to make themselves visible, audible, and thus apprehensible as human. One way to do this, I propose, is by invoking ‘the human’, as what Rancière calls, a ‘litigious name’;Footnote 89 a name that serves, as I will show, to allow the ungrievable, in this context, to performatively enact their humanity. Before I turn to Humanize Palestine to illustrate my argument, I need first to explain what Rancière means by this locution. To do so it is necessary to turn, briefly, to his distinctive understanding of politics.
Police, as noted earlier, is Rancière’s label for the distribution of roles and parts in society; how, in other words, it is organised. Operating through mechanisms such as policy, law, judicial decisions, as well as economic arrangements and cultural phenomena, the police order establishes particular modes of doing, being, and communicating.Footnote 90 It thus structures reality – and it does so in hierarchical ways. Where police ranks persons, modes of knowledge and so on, politics for Rancière, by contrast, is inherently egalitarian and democratic, resting on what he refers to as the ‘equality of any speaking being with any other speaking being’.Footnote 91 It begins with the staging of a ‘wrong’. This occurs when a part of society not acknowledged as being equal within the existing police order acts as if it is so; when, that is, the ‘uncounted’ (or the demos, for Rancière) ‘practices’, or implements, equality.Footnote 92 When that happens bodies shift from their allocated places and the hierarchical police order is disrupted; it is denaturalised and so revealed as contingent. Rancière thus equates politics with ‘dissensus’, his concept for the ways in which subaltern groups contest and reject, as Todd May puts it, ‘the position or positions its members have been allotted’ within a given police order.Footnote 93
This is where the idea of litigious names becomes pertinent. Litigious names, and Rancière includes ‘human being’ amongst them,Footnote 94 are ‘political names’ that ‘set out a question or a dispute (litige) about who is included in their count’.Footnote 95 They are names that politicise the distinction, therefore, between those encompassed by general appellations such as man, citizen, human, and those who are not. As part of a process Rancière describes as ‘subjectivization’, employing political names not only enables those acting politically to dis-identify from, that is to reject, their policed identities, capacities, and roles; it also facilitates the constitution of new (collective) resistive subjects, ones not formerly possible within the police order in contention.Footnote 96 Subjects that become visible, in other words, through politics. Litigious names serve, then, as Joseph Tanke writes, both as ‘a means for resisting hierarchy’ and contesting inequality and for reordering ‘what is perceivable, thinkable, and possible’.Footnote 97
It is my suggestion in this article that we understand the actions of Humanize Palestine in these terms. That is, as utilising the name of the ‘human’ litigiously in order to challenge how grievability, and thus humanness, are allocated within the prevailing (‘Western’) order of grievability, by politicising the distinction between whose lives count and whose do not.
On its website, an explanation is offered as to why the name Humanize Palestine was selected. The reason was not, it states, ‘to suggest that Palestinians are not human already or that Palestinians need to prove their humanity’ but rather ‘to challenge [sic] Western media’s dehumanization and “othering” of Palestinians’.Footnote 98 From a (loosely) Rancièrian perspective, we might understand this statement as identifying a wrong. Asserting that Palestinians are already human yet, paradoxically, in need of humanisation does two things. Firstly, it enacts the equality of a population not presently enjoying ontological status as human; one that is not (yet) apprehensible as such. Secondly, it points explicitly to the inegalitarianism at the heart of the prevailing order of grievability. This is the inegalitarianism reiterated by the Western media when it employs fatality metrics to represent Palestine’s dead. Furthermore, when, through its website and social media activities, Humanize Palestine honours Gaza’s dead and refuses the representations of them circulating in the mainstream Western media, it expresses a dissensus, by defying the order that positions Palestinians as less than human.
Recall that within the transnational order of grievability under scrutiny, it is alleged that the representation of Palestinians as nameless statistics dehumanises them and validates their corporeal expendability. As Humanize Palestine’s founders indicate, this is in stark contrast to how Israeli deaths are reported. Pointing to the case of the three Israeli teenagers (Naftali Fraenkel, Gilad Shaer, and Eyal Yifrah), who went missing in June 2014,Footnote 99 one of them notes, their ‘names, ages and pictures’ were all over the news.Footnote 100 ‘We knew what they looked like, who their families were and whether they were good in school or not.’Footnote 101 ‘Images of them’, she comments, ‘smiling and posing with their families circulated.’Footnote 102
We might understand this objection thus: that the media’s classification of Palestinians in numerical terms produces them as an undifferentiated, anonymous mass by representing them as victims without personal histories or individuality. Conversely, Israelis are treated, to borrow from Jenny Edkins, as ‘persons-as-such’:Footnote 103 that is, as unique, irreplaceable, individuals, subjects whose experiences of life, death, and suffering are quite unlike those of anyone else, whose hopes, dreams, and aspirations are particular to them, and who as persons exist within exclusive familial, communal and friendship relations. To counter this differential treatment, and to demonstrate the value, singularity, and humanity of Palestinian lives, therefore, the vignettes, or mini-obituaries, posted on Humanize Palestine’s various social media sites not only name each of Gaza’s dead; they share personalised stories about them, usually accompanied by either informal snapshots or formal photographs of the dead in life, as well as occasional videos by or about them.Footnote 104
Accordingly, we learn that brothers Anas and Sa’ad Akram al-Skafi, for instance, scored 88 and 91 per cent respectively in the general secondary examination, the Tawjihi; that Yousef Jameen Sheikh al-Eid was a ‘nurse’, Hani Mohammad al-Hallaq a ‘web developer’, Abdullah Nasr Fahjan a ‘sports journalist’, Atef Salih Alzamli an on-duty ‘paramedic’; that twelve-year-old ‘shy performer’ Sha’ban Jameel Ziada, ‘loved to sing’, six-year-old Kenan Hassan al-Hallaq ‘loved solving puzzles’, and his pregnant mother Samar Osama al-Hallaq, ‘was involved with the Palestinian History Tapestry Project’; and that nine-year-old Ali Sha’baib ash-Shinbari was hoping to be a lawyer while footballer Abdelrahman Jamal al-Zamli was intending to marry.Footnote 105
In terms of the critical politics of the human I sketched earlier, representing Palestinians like this allows Humanize Palestine to rupture the social ontology that initially disallows them human status, by making visible what the prevailing order sought to efface: their uniqueness and inimitability as persons. Operating through the litigious name of the human Palestinians are thus performatively constituted as fully human, as grievable beings whose lives matter. It is not that the human as a category is now identified definitively with a remodelled version that newly incorporates Palestinians within it. The human, on this interpretation, does not denote a particular subject, identity, or collective body that could be extended in this way in order to include those outside its remit.Footnote 106 The purpose of Humanize Palestine’s intervention is not, then, to demand that Palestinians be treated like Israelis, or to claim they ought to occupy a similar position to them in the prevailing order of grievability. It is better understood as a rejection of, an insurrection against, the ontology that positions Palestinians as less-than-human. It is a repudiation of the order of grievability that classifies them as ungrievable; an effort to reconfigure what it means to be human, in the sense of having a life that counts.
Moreover, as a critical politics, Humanize Palestine does not address itself to or directly call on the Western media to acknowledge Gazan grievability. It does not petition those already deemed human to recognise those denied that status or to acknowledge that their lives also count. In effect, it refuses the notion that the power to confer humanity rests exclusively with the privileged and powerful.Footnote 107 Instead, Humanize Palestine directly challenges the authority of the Western media to regulate who is grievable by appropriating the right to determine that Gazan lives matter. In the process, it subverts and resignifies public naming as a mode of humanisation, opening it up to possibilities foreclosed within the order of grievability in contention.
Finally, and relatedly, the assertion of humanity enacted by Humanize Palestine is undertaken by the ungrievable themselves, by those formerly assumed to be constitutively excluded from the category of the human. This is part of its radicality. As noted above, the litigious name of the ‘human’, provisionally and contingently appropriated in conditions of inequality, incites the appearance of (new) resistant political subjects.Footnote 108 Organised and sourced by Palestinians, Humanize Palestine therefore serves as one medium through which Palestinians are able to ‘speak for themselves’,Footnote 109 to ‘make themselves of some account’ politically.Footnote 110 It is a means through which they performatively enact their grievability and demonstrate that they are persons whose lives count. Expressed differently, through these activities the not-yet-human propel themselves into public view as meaningfully human.
Conclusion
The emphasis in this article has been on the events in Gaza in 2014. But, of course, the initiatives explored here are far from the only ones currently seeking to assert grievability for the ungrievable. To give a handful of examples: in the summer of 2013 the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter began to appear on social media, marking the start of a campaign highlighting police violence against African Americans.Footnote 111 This was followed in February 2015 by the campaign, #SayHerName, focusing on the plight of black female victims of the same violence.Footnote 112 On 30 April 2015, a list was laid down on the floor of the European Parliament naming all the ‘migrants’ drowned in the Mediterranean.Footnote 113 And, finally, launched in September 2013 by the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism, the project ‘Naming the Dead’ records and publishes the names of all those killed in US drone strikes in Pakistan.Footnote 114 Like Humanize Palestine, some of these interventions explicitly deploy the human as a litigious name, though not all do. Like Humanize Palestine some provide information about the dead as well as their names, though, again, not all do. In terms of the arguments made in this article, all of them, however, evidence the politics of the human.
There are two inter-related aspects to this politics. First, the human is a category that disallows or forecloses the inclusion of certain embodied persons within it; one that rests on the normative operations of social ontology, operations that condition who is apprehensible as fully and meaningfully human and who is not. The ontological status of being (re)cognisable as human depends, in other words, on the functioning of various social and political forces, norms, and power. Second, the human is also, and somewhat paradoxically, a category amenable to litigious invocation by subaltern groups in specific contexts; a name that allows them to stage disputes contesting their subordination, dispossession, and derealisation, disputes that – potentially, at least – make possible a reconfiguration of exclusionary definitions of ontology, grievability, and the human.Footnote 115 This is why, in tracking the category of the politics of the human in this article, I have offered no substantive account of the qualities or attributes assumed to devolve to it (classically: speech, language, or rationality), made no assumptions that all humans share the same properties or characteristics differentiating them from so-called ‘non-humans’, or used the term to refer to humanity or the human species, per se.
Instead, my focus has been on the ways in which naming, as a historical and cultural convention, has been aligned with humanisation in a specific context, Gaza in 2014, and how, consequently, the failure to name Palestine’s dead, a failure amplified in this case by their algorithmic representation, effects the latter’s dehumanisation. In my analysis of this example, I have accepted prima facie the link posited, by those involved, between naming and humanisation, and de-nomination and dehumanisation. Whether nomination is ever really sufficient on its own to humanise the dead is moot. Arguably, enumerating long lists of names of the dead serves only to convey the sheer volume of those killed much in the way numbers do, while the routinisation of such reporting risks normalising the violent deaths of the populations involved much in the way that body counts do, such that the public come to expect and accept such killings as a matter of course. These are, however, issues for another time.
What seems clear, as I have demonstrated in this article, is that when a particular population is constituted as ungrievable, when its members are not apprehensible as ontologically human within a specific order of grievability, as in the case of Palestinians in respect of the Western media, then naming them publically is an act of political dissent. When the ungrievable undertake this task themselves, as in the example of Humanize Palestine, when they claim grievability for themselves, rather than have others do it on their behalf, their actions implement – performatively enact – the equality invoked by the human as a litigious name. Asserting their humanity thus is the way they establish that their lives do indeed count.
Acknowledgements
Earlier versions of this article were delivered at the University of Cambridge Seminar for Contemporary Political Thought and as part of the University of Kent Public Lecture Series at the Brussels School of International Studies. I would like to thank both audiences for their very helpful comments and questions. I would also like to thank Andrew Thacker for reading this article in its various iterations, as well as the anonymous reviewers of the Review of International Studies for providing such incisive, extremely thorough, and careful comments. A Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship funded the research project from which this article arises.