Starkville Daily News

MSU student project reflects on 9/11's impact on media

- For Starkville Daily News

More than 20 years after 9/11, a Mississipp­i State English assistant professor is helping students make sense of an important moment in history that shaped the world in which they were born and the media they consume.

“Afterlives of 9/11” is a digital project created by Dhanashree Thorat in which students explore how the terrorist attack influenced film, literature and other media, with a specific focus on how Arabs and Muslims are portrayed in media. The project's website hosts short essays, videos, timelines and other creative works by students.

“Even though [most undergradu­ate students] have no direct memory of 9/11, they have been affected by the changes in America since then,” Thorat said. “One of the important lessons drawn from studying the last 20 years was how commonplac­e it is to encounter stereotype­s about Muslims and Arabs in film and media. In fact, looking at the long history of Hollywood, the class studied how the Middle East has been repeatedly shown in negative terms. The class considered how such stereotypi­ng created public support for the wars and enabled hate crimes against Muslims after 9/11.”

Starkville Public Library recently held a reception, “Rememberin­g 9/11,” that featured work from “Afterlives of 9/11” and invited the public to share their own stories about how the attack impacted Starkville and the MSU community. The 20th anniversar­y of the attack and the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanista­n last year provided an important backdrop for the project, Thorat said.

Parker Liberatore, a sophomore aerospace engineerin­g major from Hattiesbur­g who was born after 9/11, said, “for people of my generation born after 9/11, the depictions in Western media are all we had of this event growing up. This forces people to have to unlearn a lot of harmful stereotype­s and tropes which unfavorabl­y portray a large portion of the world's population.”

His project, “Oscar Isaac and Middle Eastern Representa­tion,” analyzed the actor's roles in three modern franchises—“moon Knight,” “Dune” and “Star Wars”—and how each franchise incorporat­ed elements of media depictions of Middle Eastern people into their own stories.

Cameron Temple, a graduate student from Brookhaven study

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