Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fading interest

Why news consumers experience ‘crisis fatigue’

- Rebecca Rozelle-Stone

W

hen Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine by land, air and sea on Feb. 24, 2022, the images of war were conveyed to dismayed onlookers around the world. Far from the action, many of us became aware of the unprovoked aggression by reading online coverage or watching TV to see explosions and people running from danger and crowding into undergroun­d bunkers.

Half a year later, the violence continues. But for those who have not been directly affected by the events, this ongoing war and its casualties have been shifting to the periphery of many people’s attention.

This turning away makes sense. Being attentive to realities like war is often painful, and people are not well-equipped to keep a sustained focus on ongoing or traumatic occurrence­s.

In addition, since the war in Ukraine began, many other events have arisen to occupy the world’s attention. These include droughts, wildfires, storms tied to global warming, mass shootings and the reversal of Roe v. Wade.

As the philosophe­r-psychologi­st William James asked, “Does not every sudden shock, appearance of a new object, or change in a sensation, create a real interrupti­on?”

Ongoing tragic events, like the assault on Ukraine, can recede from people’s attention because many may feel overwhelme­d, helpless or drawn to other urgent issues. This phenomenon is called “crisis fatigue.”

ROOTS OF CRISIS FATIGUE

Malevolent actors and authoritar­ians like Putin are aware of public fatigue and use it to their advantage. “War fatigue is kicking in,” the Estonian prime minister, Kaja Kallas, said. “Russia is playing on us getting tired. We must not fall into the trap.”

In a speech to marketing profession­als in Cannes, France, the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, asked them to keep the world focused on his country’s plight. “I’ll be honest with you — the end of this war and its circumstan­ces depend on the world’s attention …,” he said. “Don’t let the world switch to something else!”

Unfortunat­ely, many of us have already changed the channel. The tragic has become banal.

I became interested in the phenomenon of fatigue as a result of my scholarly research into moral attentiven­ess. This idea was articulate­d by the 20th-century French philosophe­r and social activist Simone Weil.

According to Weil, moral attention is the capacity to open ourselves up fully — intellectu­ally, emotionall­y and even physically — to the realities that we encounter. She described such attention as vigilance, a suspension of our ego-driven frameworks and personal desires in favor of a Buddhist-like emptiness of mind. This mindset receives, raw and unfiltered, whatever is presented without avoidance or projection.

Not surprising­ly, Weil found attention to be inseparabl­e from compassion, or “suffering with” the other. There is no avoiding pain

and anguish when one attends to the afflicted; hence, she wrote that “thought flies from affliction as promptly and irresistib­ly as an animal flies from death.”

The sensitivit­y involved in attending to crises can be a double-edged sword. On one hand, attention can put people in touch with the unvarnishe­d lives of others so the afflicted are truly seen and heard. On the other, such openness can overwhelm many of us through vicarious trauma, as psychologi­sts Lisa McCann and Laurie Pearlman have noted.

The difficulty of sustained focus on events like the war is due not only to the inherent fragility of moral attention, however. As cultural critics like Neil Postman, James Williams and Maggie Jackson have noted, the 24/7 news cycle is one of many pressures clamoring for our attention. Our smartphone­s and other technology with incessant communicat­ions — from trivial to apocalypti­c — engineer environmen­ts to keep us perpetuall­y distracted and disoriente­d.

WHY AUDIENCES TUNE OUT

Aside from the threats to people’s attention posed by our distractin­g technologi­es and informatio­n overload, there is also the fact of crisis fatigue leading readers to consume less news.

This year, a Reuters Institute analysis showed that interest in news has decreased sharply across all markets, from 63% in 2017 to 51% in 2022, while a full 15% of Americans have disconnect­ed from news coverage altogether.

According to the Reuters report, the reasons for this differ, in part, with political affiliatio­n. Conservati­ve voters tend to avoid the news because they deem it untrustwor­thy or biased, while liberal voters avoid news because of feelings of powerlessn­ess and fatigue. Online news, with its perpetual drive to keep eyes trained on screens, is unwittingl­y underminin­g its own goals: to provide news and keep the public informed.

TAKING A NEW TACK

How might we recover a capacity for meaningful attention and responses amid incessant, disjointed and overwhelmi­ng news? Scholars have made a variety of recommenda­tions, usually focused on reining in digital device usage. Beyond this, readers and journalist­s might consider the following:

› Limiting the daily intake of news can help people become more attentive to particular issues of concern without feeling overwhelme­d. Cultural theorist Yves Citton, in his book “The Ecology of Attention,” urges readers to “extract” themselves “from the hold of the alertness media regime.” According to him, the current media creates a state of “permanent alertness” through “crisis discourses, images of catastroph­es, political scandals, and violent news items.” At the same time, reading long-form articles and essays can actually be a practice that helps with cultivatin­g attentiven­ess.

› Journalist­s can include more solutions-based stories that capture the possibilit­y of change. Avenues for action can be offered to readers to counteract paralysis in the face of tragedy. Amanda Ripley, a former Time magazine journalist, notes that “stories that offer hope, agency, and dignity feel like breaking news right now, because we are so overwhelme­d with the opposite.”

Weil, who was committed to the responsibi­lity of moral attentiven­ess but did not romanticiz­e tragedy, wrote, “Nothing is so beautiful and wonderful, nothing is so continuall­y fresh and surprising, so full of sweet and perpetual ecstasy, as the good.”

Rebecca Rozelle-Stone is a professor of philosophy at the University of North Dakota.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

 ?? AP PHOTO/KOSTIANTYN LIBEROV ?? Wounded Ukrainian soldiers are seen last week inside a vehicle in the freed territory of the Kharkiv region of Ukraine. Being attentive to realities like war is often painful, and people are not well-equipped to keep a sustained focus on ongoing or traumatic occurrence­s, writes Rebecca Rozelle-Stone.
AP PHOTO/KOSTIANTYN LIBEROV Wounded Ukrainian soldiers are seen last week inside a vehicle in the freed territory of the Kharkiv region of Ukraine. Being attentive to realities like war is often painful, and people are not well-equipped to keep a sustained focus on ongoing or traumatic occurrence­s, writes Rebecca Rozelle-Stone.
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 ?? AP FILE / GETTY IMAGES / PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BILL RAMSEY ??
AP FILE / GETTY IMAGES / PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BILL RAMSEY
 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDRII MARIENKO ?? Ukrainian women hug Aug. 18 in front of a building destroyed during a missile strike in Kharkiv, Ukraine.
AP PHOTO/ANDRII MARIENKO Ukrainian women hug Aug. 18 in front of a building destroyed during a missile strike in Kharkiv, Ukraine.

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