An article in The Onion mocks voluntourism, joking that a 6-day visit to a rural African village can “completely change a woman’s facebook profile picture.” The article quotes “22-year old Angela Fisher” who says:
I don’t think my profile photo will ever be the same, not after the experience of taking such incredible pictures with my arms around those small African children’s shoulders.
It goes on to say that Fisher “has been encouraging every one of her friends to visit Africa, promising that it would change their Facebook profile photos as well.”
I was once Angela Fisher. But I’m not any more.
***
I have participated in not one but three separate, and increasingly disillusioning, international health brigades, short-term visits to developing countries that involve bringing health care to struggling populations.
Such trips – critically called voluntourism — are a booming business, even though they do very little advertising and charge people thousands of dollars to participate.
How do they attract so many paying volunteers?
Photography is a big part of the answer. Voluntourism organizations don’t have to advertise, because they can crowdsource. Photography – particularly the habit of taking and posting selfies with local children – is a central component of the voluntourism experience. Hashtags like #InstagrammingAfrica are popular with students on international health brigades, as are #medicalbrigades, #globalhealth, and of course the nostalgic-for-the-good-days hashtag #takemeback.
It was the photographs posted by other students that inspired me to go on my first overseas medical mission. When classmates uploaded the experience of themselves wearing scrubs beside adorable children in developing countries, I believed I was missing out on a pivotal pre-med experience. I took over 200 photos on my first international volunteer mission. I modeled those I had seen on Facebook and even premeditated photo opportunities to acquire the “perfect” image that would receive the most “likes.”
Over time, I felt increasingly uncomfortable with the ethics of those photographs, and ultimately left my camera at home. Now, as an insider, I see three common types of photographs voluntourists share through social media: The Suffering Other, The Self-Directed Samaritan, and The Overseas Selfie.
The Suffering Other
In a photograph taken by a fellow voluntourist in Ghana (not shown), a child stands isolated with her bare feet digging in the dirt. Her hands pull up her shirt to expose an umbilical hernia, distended belly, and a pair of too-big underwear. Her face is uncertain and her scalp shows evidence of dermatological pathology or a nutritional deficiency—maybe both. Behind her, only weeds grow.
Anthropologists Arthur and Joan Kleinman note that images of distant, suffering women and children suggest there are communities incapable of or uninterested in caring for its own people. These photographs justify colonialist, paternalistic attitudes and policies, suggesting that the individual in the photograph…
…must be protected, as well as represented, by others. The image of the subaltern conjures up an almost neocolonial ideology of failure, inadequacy, passivity, fatalism, and inevitability. Something must be done, and it must be done soon, but from outside the local setting. The authorization of action through an appeal for foreign aid, even foreign intervention, begins with an evocation of indigenous absence, an erasure of local voices and acts.
The Self-directed Samaritan
Here we have a smiling young white girl with a French braid, medical scrubs, and a well-intentioned smile. This young lady is the centerpiece of the photo; she is its protagonist. Her scrubs suggest that she is doing important work among those who are so poor, so vulnerable, and so Other.
The girl is me. And the photograph was taken on my first trip to Ghana during a 10 day medical brigade. I’m beaming in the photograph, half towering and half hovering over these children. I do not know their names, they do not know my name, but I directed a friend to capture this moment with my own camera. Why?
This photograph is less about doing actual work and more about retrospectively appearing to have had a positive impact overseas. Photographs like these represent the overseas experience in accordance with what writer Teju Cole calls the “White Savior Industrial Complex.”
Moreover, in directing, capturing, and performing in photos such as these, voluntourists prevent themselves from actually engaging with the others in the photo. In On Photography, Susan Sontag reminds us:
Photography has become almost as widely practiced an amusement as sex and dancing – which means that…it is mainly a social rite, a defense against anxiety, and a tool of power.
On these trips, we hide behind the lens, consuming the world around us with our powerful gazes and the clicking of camera shutters. When I directed this photo opportunity and starred in it, I used my privilege to capture a photograph that made me feel as though I was engaging with the community. Only now do I realize that what I was actually doing was making myself the hero/star in a story about “suffering Africa.”
The Overseas Selfie
[Photo removed in response to a request from Global Brigades.]
In his New York Times Op-Ed, that modern champion of the selfie James Franco wrote:
Selfies are avatars: Mini-Me’s that we send out to give others a sense of who we are … In our age of social networking, the selfie is the new way to look someone right in the eye and say, “Hello, this is me.”
Although related to the Self-Directed Samaritan shot, there’s something extra-insidious about this type of super-close range photo. “Hello, this is me” takes on new meaning – there is only one subject in this photo, the white subject. Capturing this image and posting it on the internet is to understand the Other not as a separate person who exists in the context of their own family or community but rather, as a prop, an extra, someone only intelligible in relation to the Western volunteer.
***
Voluntourism is ultimately about the fulfillment of the volunteers themselves, not necessarily what they bring to the communities they visit. In fact, medical volunteerism often breaks down existing local health systems. In Ghana, I realized that that local people weren’t purchasing health insurance, since they knew there would be free foreign health care and medications available every few months. This left them vulnerable in the intervening times, not to mention when the organization would leave the community.
In the end, the Africa we voluntourists photograph isn’t a real place at all. It is an imaginary geography whose landscapes are forged by colonialism, as well as a good deal of narcissism. I hope my fellow students think critically about what they are doing and why before they sign up for a short-term global volunteer experience. And if they do go, it is my hope that they might think with some degree of narrative humility about how to de-center themselves from the Western savior narrative. Most importantly, I hope they leave their iphones at home.
Cross-posted at Pacific Standard and at Mondiaal Nieuws in Dutch.
Lauren Kascak is a graduate of the Masters Program in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University, where Sayantani DasGupta is a faculty member. DasGupta is the editor of Stories of Illness and Healing and the author of The Demon Slayers and Other Stories and Her Own Medicine.
Comments 109
Tee — June 18, 2014
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS.
Fernando — June 18, 2014
"In Ghana, I realized that that local people weren’t purchasing health insurance, since they knew there would be free foreign health care and medications available every few months. This left them vulnerable in the intervening times, not to mention when the organization would leave the community."
That makes it sound they don't know any better about what's good for them.
Ignoring intention and all of the ego issues, is helping other people bad?
Just as it can be bad to ego trip while working as a volunteer, it's still bad to seemingly focus only on the ego and nothing else. Sounds like discouraging and demeriting volunteering.
a — June 18, 2014
I have been uncomfortable and not enjoyed when a blogger I follow posted about a volunteer trip to Africa. Then I felt guilty about not liking those posts. Though they were missionary trips, which is a whole issue onto itself. (Joy at http://compassionbloggers.com/trips/uganda-2014/ if you're curious.) Thanks for giving me something to think about.
NancyP — June 18, 2014
Selfie-with-local-kids is an uninformative photograph. Take it for your own memories, if you wish. More informative would be a photo of the clinic space, any cheap or home-built solutions to clinic needs, existence of generators, photo of road leading to clinic (dirt road? seasonal problems with access?), photo of clinic staff including nurses, local lay health educators, etc. What are the capacities of the clinic? What defects does it have? One thing that people don't consider is that the lack of consistent electricity means lack of refrigeration, which is problematic for some but not all vaccines. Ask the patient if they would be willing to let you photograph their medical problem. Clinical photographs should be in the style of standard clinical photographs where the patient's identity is masked by means of tight crops, black bars, etc. Particularly valuable would be photographs documenting the use of older technology/ technique or novel use of new technology in a treatment. For example, topical silver applications are still used with success for skin ulcers, burns, etc.(personal communication from American doctor who is moving for good to a mid-sized teaching hospital in Africa. Stories and photographs of trainees and clinic staff would be of interest.
Finally, don't ditch the iPhone. If nothing else, make a cheap microscope attachment for it. eg: http://gizmodo.com/how-to-use-a-laser-pointer-to-turn-your-iphone-into-a-m-1448478994 or buy one: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/968523355/micro-phone-lens-150x-cell-phone-based-microscope Make a blood film and show the kids some of their own blood cells. Take along a few prepared slides. If there are ova and parasites found, show those. Sticky tape test for pinworms! Children are curious.
Amy Santee — June 18, 2014
Thank you for this excellent reflexive piece on positionality, power and privilege.
Tash — June 19, 2014
As someone who's been on brigades before, I disagree with this article. It seems to generalize everyone's intentions of the brigade. Yes I do agree that there may be people who disregard their ethics & courtesy before taking photos with/of others
of the native country, but for the love of god if you think these people (and by people I believe you're targeting young adults such as Highschool/college students who obviously don't have all the money to spend in the world) spend thousands of dollars & months fundraising just to have self fulfillment of photos as an overarching intention over physically helping the under resourced community, there's something wrong here. As for breaking down the health system of the country, I wouldn't generalize that for every country. Definitely look into every program you're going on with how the system works, but many programs have thought that through. The medical brigade I went on provided a months with of medicine to each client in need within the community, and another brigade would come in the following month just in time for their next prescription due. As a future health care professional entering my final year in college, I did not go in brigades just to go against all ethics I was taught in school to take pictures of people I wouldn't even ask. I did these brigades because I came from a third world country exactly like the countries I have visited and because I plan on taking this into my future career. I am not saying everyone is like this & everyone has purely good intentions about these service trips, but please do not display these service trips to a lower level than they were meant to be.
Headlines - Page 78 — June 19, 2014
[…] #InstragrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism Sociological Images […]
wyclif — June 19, 2014
"Anthropologists Arthur and Joan Kleinman note that images of distant, suffering women and children suggest there are communities incapable of or uninterested in caring for its own people."
The photos themselves suggest this? Seriously? Not the murderous dictators like Robert Mugabe who actually aren't interested in caring for their own people, but only bleeding their countries dry of natural resources?
I find the tone of this piece not only self-serving, but generalising in a very broad-brush manner. It seems to me that there are many medical missions from the west that do a lot of good in third world countries—everything from harelip surgery that children would never otherwise receive to maternity health care.
Voluntourism: Do My Scrubs Make Me Look Fat? | Occam's Razor & Shave — June 19, 2014
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Heather — June 19, 2014
I have an issue with the tendency for aid organizations, many of which are actually doing real, needed, and appropriate investment in low resource regions, to follow the "look at these sad poor brown children" approach in their fundraising and reporting. I much prefer to use intervention-focused imagery (here's an example of the toilets we're installing, he's the women's condom we developed, etc.). Feels much less paternalistic and like aid is the new colonization.
Dana Lee Pertermann — June 19, 2014
Would have been nice if the article had included ways to help that aren't so harmful....
Gwen — June 19, 2014
You're still that person. You just think you aren't.
scratchy888 — June 19, 2014
In reality you need to put your back into it.
Washing the dust off | Dispatches from the Cowgirl — June 20, 2014
[…] African Village Completely Changes Woman’s Facebook Profile Picture). And again, yesterday, another article about voluntourism and its ability to feed our narcissistic need to advertise our good deeds […]
Chang He — June 20, 2014
They don't purchase insurance because all the doctors in the country are fleeing to South Africa (at least) or Europe or America because they get paid better. Certainly there are faults with the short term mission model, but decline in health insurance purchasing isn't one of them.
Clara Marshall — June 20, 2014
As a former long-term 'voluntourist' in Africa and a current global health grant administrator, I recognize both the problematic attitude and the unintended consequences of aid provided without the participation and input of affected communities that the author discusses. At the same time, I think that much of this discussion misses the point. While I agree that 'voluntourism is ultimately about the fulfillment of the volunteers themselves,' in the context of an appropriately planned and culturally competent project, motivations of individual participants don't really matter. Social media dissemination of these kinds of photographs can serve as a mechanism to inform others about conditions to which they would otherwise have no exposure, and to encourage others to expend their own money or effort in addressing problems for which there are limited local resources. That the motivation behind a particular photograph is unpleasant does not mean that its effect, and indeed the effect of the act it portrays, is negative as well.
How Matters — June 23, 2014
"I’ve always had trouble understanding why people would call themselves do-gooders, humanitarians, or even activists. Maybe it’s because I can’t help but compare it to someone taking pride in how humble they are." More here on the "Humanitarians of Tinder" phenomenom: http://www.how-matters.org/2014/06/18/are-you-a-humanitarian-why/
Karus — June 24, 2014
I think in the first place the term should shift from volunteer-ship to self-ship because all of us know that these self-seeking 21st century 'so-called volunteers' are serving their interests. Its judicial notice like it is to 24 hours in a day. Starting from medical interns, you are gaining knowledge of tropical health and you should infact pay the study population for this service not volunteer. This happens even in developed countries, if you use a person for your clinical trials you must compensate them. Am not saying that there are no needy people in Africa but the way you present yourselves as saviours makes you even more vulnerable. You should know that you not the richest in those countries where you are volunteering. You infact avoid expensive places and opt for cheap means of living where even your own security gets compromised.
This is the insider's view (emic), Africans will not spend on a European person given the status Europeans have put in their historical path.
Danimule Fernandez — June 24, 2014
If it brings a bit of help and infrastructure to disadvantaged villages and makes suburban Westerners self-esteem than what is the big issue?
rolfen — June 24, 2014
It was all good when this helped her get "likes" and put her at the center of the stories, but now it's it's sold and discarded as evil. We're not very much told why, only vague ideas and quotes from intimidatingly "smart" people. As long as it helps attract attention and put her in the spotlight again.
Selfie or not, it doesn't matter - it's not going to help nor set back people who we're supposed to help. All of it is a non issue.
Chandler — June 24, 2014
Hi Lauren,
I have also been on two service trips to Africa, and I agree with a lot of what you say. However being from the South one thing I thought about when I saw the picture of you and the children in Ghana was that only in the last 30 to 40 years has a picture like that become socially acceptable. If you posted that picture in 1963 you would have received a lot more hateful messages than "likes". That's the reason I still think that the picture is beautiful.
Karolle — June 24, 2014
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Lauren. I'm increasingly uneasy with how tourists/voluntourists interact with locals, especially children (which I wrote a bit about here: http://www.karolle.com/kids-tourist-attractions/), and think these are important conversations to have.
JJ — June 24, 2014
Pippa Biddle has a similar point of view regarding voluntourism. Check out her article : http://pippabiddle.com/2014/02/18/the-problem-with-little-white-girls-and-boys/
content generating machine. — June 24, 2014
Why did you repost the picture though? I think the point could have been made sans selfie.
CorW — June 24, 2014
Very quick point I want to make here: while the purpose of these trips is to "help" the local populations (we can argue whether or not they actually do in fact help in such a short time) the real thing that these trips do are expose large groups of people to the realities of the world around them. By doing this, one in every thousand or so are going to be affected profoundly by their experience and work toward meaningful change in their career. Is it narcissistic to look for one's purpose in life? I say no, and even if 999 of every 1000 people "help" abroad and return home, the one person who was affected by the experience makes it worthwhile.
Abraar Karan — June 25, 2014
I think this is an important topic and I applaud the authors for bringing attention to it. However, having worked in global health for 7 years and being a photographer, I would like to point out that there is an opportunity to do this the right way. The importance of photography in creating movements, in celebrating successes, and in portraying life for educational purposes to create more informed citizens are all potentially beneficial effects of social media for global health. My group is trying to promote this, ironically through instagram itself. http://swasthyamundial.com/2014/04/an-instagram-for-global-health-calling-for-the-best-shots-out-there/
Abraar
E. Smith — June 25, 2014
I would love to know what the author's thoughts are about short-term missions or volunteer trips in general (whether the abbreviated length of a trip affects the effectiveness of the help given and whether such brief connections to local people leave them feeling more vulnerable as opposed to truly empowered). I also wonder if you have any thoughts on Westerners aiding in general? How does a well-intentioned person aid them in such a way as to empower them to enact their own improvement? I don't suppose that you know the answer, but I would love to hear your thoughts.
halkun — June 25, 2014
Kind of similar, reminds me of this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxVZYiJKl1Y
#InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism.” BY LAUREN KASCAK & SAYANTANI DASGUPTA | — June 25, 2014
[…] This post originally appeared on Sociological Images […]
From Sociological Images: “#InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism” | Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian (N.A.H.) — June 25, 2014
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| ADRIFTINTHECIRCLE — June 26, 2014
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Eric Hartman — June 27, 2014
Important and challenging themes are raised here, but - as much of the discussion suggests - it's unclear where the line is between the author's post-experience meaning-making and (any?) empirical data, either qualitative or quantitative. This assertion is particularly interesting and begging for corroboration:
"In Ghana, I realized that that local people weren’t purchasing health insurance, since they knew there would be free foreign health care and medications available every few months. This left them vulnerable in the intervening times, not to mention when the organization would leave the community."
I'm not saying it's not true. I'm simply not in a position to know. Like many of the people commenting in this thread, I've spent some time in Ghana as well as many other places in the Global South, but this does not give me any capacity to be certain about that assertion above. I have also seen excellent capacity-building interventions completed through cooperation between and among local community-based organizations, international NGOs, and domestic and foreign universities. And I have seen terrible interventions.
There are ways to do this responsibly and ways to do it poorly. That's why a coalition of universities is coming together to gather, share, and further develop research and best practices in conscientious global engagement at globalsl.org, which we are re-launching early this fall. I hope these kinds of concerns will continue to be raised, and I hope we'll continue to look at actual data and existing best practices, like this excellent resource on responsible social media use from the Irish Aid organization Comhlamh: http://issuu.com/comhlamh/docs/social-media-guidelines (as just one example among scores of existing resources in this dialogue / area of research and best practice).
karensd — June 28, 2014
Many many issues going on here--but as someone who's lived in W. Africa most of my adult life, and raised children there, and has seen these short-termers come and go with varying results, the most important issue the author points to is the need to "de-center" from the Western "savior complex", "narrative humility" i.e. YOU will be taught much more than you will teach, probably. The reality is that unless you have a way on carrying on long-term, genuine relationships with the people you interact with, they will go back to their day-to-day, difficult lives, will revert to what they know and what "works" for them, will forget what you brought and did, but MIGHT hope that maybe you'll come again--but you probably won't. That doesn't mean AT ALL that's it's not worth doing these trips--medical efforts are often especially helpful, even if there's a system in place in the country; can't our short-term efforts be connected with and point people towards what they are able to get there? (and realistically, at least in W. Africa, that's often sparse, costly and not run by real professionals, since the trained professionals often leave their own country....) And in a time of urgent crisis like epidemic outbreak, or natural disaster, any immediate care is helpful--WHEN done by people knowledgeable of the local/national system and efforts already in place.
The author's point about the fb selfie--HUGE. I have seen so many updated profile pics of someone in their latest philanthropic effort. Lovely. Who is that about , actually? Obvious answer...we (usually) don't hear the names of the kids, or learn about their lives (I do know some exceptions!). If you have to do the pic, leave yourself out of it, maybe do just 1 to PROVE that you were there, but really....Ask if you're wanting more to tell YOUR own life journey on fb/twitter, etc, or if you want people to know about what's going on wherever you got to serve. If it's the latter, you don't need to be in the pics. Really.
#InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global VoluntourismCoaster World News | Coaster World News — June 28, 2014
[…] post creatively seemed on Sociological Images, a Pacific Standard partner site, as […]
dyylannn — June 29, 2014
I entirely disagree with what she has said.
Heres my response
http://dream-brite.blogspot.com/2014/06/contrary-to-popular-belief-volunteering.html
Harriet — June 30, 2014
Sorry, I find this incredibly insulting. Firstly, #Africa ?! Are we generalising on a whole continent? A generalisation about what a pair of scrubs says about your intentions?! I have photos from when I worked in a local hospital in Mwanza and it was at the end of a 3 week placement and of me and the midwives/obstetricians with whom I worked. There's also a photo of me and the first baby I delivered and the mama, taken with her permission as it had been a successful experience for both of us, as well as photos of/with the local schoolkids whom I'd bonded with and had some really wonderful and happy times with. I wanted to have a memory of the time I had there. A lot of my medic friends have done wonderful things in Tanzania and Uganda, photos and all. They were taken because it was a unique experience and serves as a reminder of the time we had out there. A lot of us took our own medical supplies to donate and I left behind medical textbooks. How is this a negative thing?! There is no such thing as true altruism, one can argue that anyone attempting to do good in the world is just a narcissist. I won't even go into the benefits gained from transfer of skills (when requested) both to and from medics in the volunteer programme hospitals. Not all people are neo colonial dicks looking to be heroes, some of us actually care about helping others.
#InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism | hellotini — June 30, 2014
[…] #InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism […]
Daniel Brevick — July 4, 2014
I must take issue with Lauren’s article and her assertions. Clearly, she went on her trips with ill motives “I believed I was missing out on a pivotal pre-med experience”. She admits to having a friend shoot pictures (orchestrating them to appear that she is helping). She is volunteering to help children - yet admittedly doesn’t know a single childs name. Lauren even admits that the health care she provided caused harm. She is, by her own description, absolutely the worst international volunteer I have heard of.
“Fully towering” over these self-confessed flaws is Lauren’s assumption that everyone else goes with these same motives and everyone harms those they seek to help. The real narcissism is someone so self-centered she assumes everyone else must think and act as badly as she does.
It seems Lauren has remorse for the harm she caused, remorse concerning her motives and the pictures she orchestrated. She does align herself with a seriously flawed fictitious character from an article in the Onion.
“I was once Angela Fisher. But I’m not any more.”
This should have resulted in a confession between her and her God or whatever karma remedy she might take comfort in, instead she chose prejudice. This article is so incredibly narcissistic, rather then self examination and confession turning into growth, Lauren turns it into this lofty, “I’ve made mistakes, but I’m better then you all, because now I’m exposing us all” - it’s sickening, Lauren – your experience is your own and not typical.
Without knowing them, without knowing their motives, Lauren chose to align all who post images from international volunteering trips, with her own mis-deeds. This is the very definition of prejudice (and narcissism). Easily two million people volunteer abroad annually, many post pictures on FB.
Prejudice also explains her citing of the “white savior industrial complex,” and “the western savior narrative”. I’m sick of the whole “whites going to save blacks” criticism of NGOs and individuals who are genuinely going to help. These accusations are in fact racism at it’s worst, it’s tribalism and clannish. Lauren, because I’m a white American I can’t help black people in Kibera, Casino or the slums of Nakuru? Because I’m a white Christian I can’t join with Somali Muslim Diaspora to help in bringing peace to Somalia?
Lauren are you saying that as a white man I should only help white people? That Indian people should only help those in India? That the Spanish should stay in Spain? Your position and those who espouse it is racism, it’s tribalism and clannish. For me I’m a human being and if I choose to help another human being why must you make skin color a factor?
Lauren says: “Moreover, in directing, capturing, and performing in photos such as these, voluntourists prevent themselves from actually engaging with the others in the photo”. Lauren this accusation is shameful, because you did this doesn’t mean that others have. I know many volunteers who are fully engaged - and - are photographed during that engagement. This comment also shows a lack of knowledge - you really believe someone travels, takes on great risks, lives under difficult and stressful conditions, for a month to three months, for the purpose of creating goofing photo ops? It’s hard to read stuff like this knowing the people I know and knowing the sacrifices many of us who volunteer make.
I’m currently making a documentary film on international volunteering. I’ve heard good augments against certain types of international volunteering, but Lauren’s is very weak and narcissistic. I’ve interviewed over 40 volunteers from 6 countries and three continents and have very close relationships with several organizations that receive volunteers. The practice of international volunteering is very positive for both those who go and those who receive volunteers.
People post images on Facebook for those things for which they are passionate. Many people go and help and really help without doing harm, not everyone is self-centered, the accusations in this article are prejudicial, narcissistic and shameful - Lauren, again, your experience is your own and not typical.
Why I Joined the Peace Corps | Malagasy Musings — July 11, 2014
[…] recently read several articles denouncing the narcissism of global voluntourism, a growing trend whereby well-meaning individuals embark on a short-term […]
LK — July 15, 2014
http://voicesinbioethics.org/2014/07/14/the-poor-deserve-perfection-the-case-against-pre-health-volunteers-in-global-health/
Frode Helland — July 30, 2014
According to the principles of Fair Use, you are free to use the image from Global Brigades, regardless of what they think.
Capt. Kirk — August 2, 2014
I understand the concerns about "colonialist, paternalistic attitudes and policies", “White Savior Industrial Complex," and narcissistic West-o-centrism, but think the conversation should center more around the interpretation and reception of images, and education of how to critically construct and read images, and steer clear of using images to form conclusions about the morality of short-term "voluntourism" and its photographic embellishments. It is not essentially narcissistic for a white American to take pictures with black babies and "suffering Others" while on a medical short-term service trip--it is only narcissistic if the person is actually narcissistic, which can't be judged from images (and in fact can't be judged at all by any human except the narcissist). The actual experience may have been edifying or degrading for those involved, but the photograph won't tell us that. It tells its own narrative in a new context. The current cultural spirit is deconstructing White selfishness and narcissism in other countries by re-interpreting images of trips to those countries. Fine--but let's be charitable by not assuming this gives much insight into the hearts of the individuals in such pictures who haven't explicitly confessed their intent, lest we become cynics. Kascak writes, "there is only one subject in this photo, the white subject." This is a confession of her intent, reflection, and repentance, not a generalization applicable to all photos of this kind. The upshot: let's take Kascak's story as an exception of confession, not as a rule of interpretation.
Other views on voluntourism | Race, Education, and Service — August 3, 2014
[…] #InstagrammingAfrica: The narcissism of global voluntourism (The Society Pages) One of the particular controversies sparked by this topic is that of the photos volunteers post from their trips. Images of the suffering other “suggest there are communities incapable of or uninterested in caring for its own people.” […]
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[…] here? Did you draw us here to show us a good cause? Are you calling us to war against the infidel? Are you calling us to help the black and brown children of the world? Who can we save here in the wilderness? Is that them, on the other side of the […]
Grace — September 17, 2014
Throughout history, there have always been people who choose to "give of themselves" or do charity for purpose of praise, self-recognition, or self-gain. Those motives are obviously shallow and disingenuous (and yucky), but at the end of the day, even the most shallow and naive of these volunteers has actually done something to meet the needs of the needy -- accomplishing more positive than a person, say sitting in the comforts of home, belittling the service and experience of another in a judgmental article. Sure, there are many more sustainable ways to help, rather than week-long missions, but if that's what one can give and they benefit others in giving, why demean them for it ? It is interesting to consider that many times the people complaining do little to help even their own communities. There is a lot of empowering information people interested in helping need to be educated about -- how to be most efficient and sustainable in helping abroad, as well as how to be culturally sensitive and respectful. An article teaching and encouraging people about these how's and why's would be more helpful than blog posts like this. Of all the medical volunteers, relief workers, and missionaries I know who go abroad to offer their hearts, skills, time, and money to those in need, the percentage of those who go with disingenuous motives is in the ten percent. Some people help best in their neighborhood, some people have great passion and lots to give of themselves abroad -few people do both -many do neither. What would India be like if Mother Teresa never went to serve and then live with a people who were not her own ? Food for thought. Another perspective.
“I just can’t picture it. Like, is there dust everywhere?” | Dust Everywhere — September 18, 2014
[…] the continent, or have visited it themselves, usually coming for charity, mission work, safari, or voluntourism. I’ve been asked if I’m going there to teach English, despite the fact that Ghana’s official […]
Is Volunteering in the International Arena Neocolonial? | SociologyInFocus — October 29, 2014
[…] a radical rethink on the ethics of so-called volunteerism.” And in perhaps the most insidious, narcissistic examples, volunteers can make their efforts more about themselves than anyone else, where taking selfies […]
To My Future Boss – Check Out My Pictures in Africa! | BOMAH — December 11, 2014
[…] recently read #InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Volunteerism and it made me look at these pictures on Facebook a little differently. I now saw myself […]
The Narcissism of Global Volunteerism | nesarajah.com — December 30, 2014
[…] Full article: http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/12/29/instragrammingafrica-the-narcissism-of-global-volunt… […]
GitaNav — December 30, 2014
Anyone who goes on a missionary or volunteer trip just to take pictures with poor people is an idiot. Did she go on the trip and take the pictures merely to get an article published? Let's hope she gained more from her experiences than photos. There's nothing wrong with taking pictures or having others take pictures of you whilst on a volunteer or missionary job. People who go on these trips have good hearts and want to help others, except perhaps for the rare exception of people like this girl.
Sarah Jerl — January 2, 2015
Gawd what a sad self loathing piece of nonsense.
Talk about projecting your own problems on to others! - Not everyone carefully plans their photos of poor africans to get the most Likes on facebook - some people take photos with the people they've got to know to remember them and their trip.
The rest of the article is just full of that "deep" pomo nonsense where you attribute bad intentions to people then pretend that you've done a scholarly deconstruction of their actions "Really the act of white people buying fruit from the African people in the market is a revisiting of the colonial desire to consume the resources of the subaltern, which reconfigures the patriarchy.
The White Women’s Burden? | Shantih Shantih Shantih — January 2, 2015
[…] going abroad are good (they’re not secretly selfish people who are just doing this for their new profile photos!). People do mean to make a positive difference when they go abroad, they simply may not be aware of […]
Maria — February 7, 2015
I have participated in voluntourism. During my trip I supported the local economy, did construction work, and bonded with children who were orphaned and disabled. My expenses for the trip involved airfare, food, and a large donation to the organization that I worked with. I learned a little about another country did some hard work as well as fun things. And yes, I took some pictures. They weren't only of me with children, but also of some of the beautiful things I saw in that country. My profile picture stayed the same as before the trip. For the record, this country is one of the poorest in the world. The kids were happy to have people to play with them. Some of those kids end up getting adopted. I hate seeing these ridiculous posts about things that don't need to be villainized. If people want to do some volunteer work in another country while getting a little vacation from the stresses of home, what is the harm in that?
Voluntourism | Just Who Do You Think You Are? — February 15, 2015
[…] http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/12/29/instragrammingafrica-the-narcissism-of-global-volunt… […]
What are some popular representations of medical voluntourism? | The Ethics of Voluntourism — May 19, 2015
[…] Kascak, Lauren. 2014 #InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism. http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/12/29/instragrammingafrica-the-narcissism-of-global-volunt…. […]
ltcajh — September 15, 2015
So Africa doesn't need any help from the white man? Doesn't look like Africa has amounted to much, outside of Egypt. Guess we should let them excel on their own then. Tell you what, when I retired from the military I considered going on a medical mission for two or three months. When I found out that my free expertise in healthcare had to be funded by me? No, I don't think so! And being a tourist while on location- so what? I can't personally play the tourist? Also, I'm not going to have one ounce of shame for my skin color.
On the question of churches and the week or two long missions to Mexico, etc. Christianity Today, several years ago, had a pro/con argument on that subject. I figure that we could pay for someone to do the construction work we do, which would help their economy. But the pro argument was that it is a growing experience for the participants. Pick your attitude!
In Iraq we did tons of good for the locals. We didn't ask for a thing. You say it's of no consequence kiddo?
The narcissism of voluntourism | The alley kat. — September 15, 2015
[…] Kascak, L 2014, #Instagramming Africa: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism, The Society Pages, weblog post, 29 December 2014, <http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/12/29/instragrammingafrica-the-narcissism-of-global-volunt…>. […]
¿Labor social o red social?, por Ines Yabar - — November 6, 2015
[…] y benévolas, solo quiero que pensemos ¿porqué lo estamos haciendo y publicando? ¿Estamos #InstagramingAfrica y ayudando que las empresas de volunturismo tengan mayores utilidades? O ¿estamos haciendo […]
The rigor of representation - UCLA Center for Health Advancement — April 28, 2016
[…] Lauren Kascak and Sayantani DasGupta have a thoughtful piece in Sociological Images about the role of photography in global voluntourism. […]
Poverty Porn: Sensationalism, Paternalism & the White Saviour Complex – LOGICAT — May 15, 2016
[…] <https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/12/29/instragrammingafrica-the-narcissism-of-global-volun…> […]
Ecotrek Cameroon — June 6, 2016
ECOTREK CAMEROON is a platform that points people who are in interested in volunteering with opportunties to make a difference in Africa,Cameroon.
ECOTREK CAMEROON takes no responsibility for volunteers. We are here to provide information and support solely.
Visit Cameroon through ECOTREK CAMEROON, work in a local NGO/CIG, research, visit cultural sites, organize your shows/meetings while staying with us...
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Is the Media giving White Saviorism more attention than it deserves? – Undeniably Becca. — February 16, 2019
[…] #InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism. The Society Pages. Available at: https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/12/29/instragrammingafrica-the-narcissism-of-global-volun… (Accessed […]
Hur är det rimligt att resa? – Anna Toss & C:o — March 16, 2019
[…] #InstagrammingAfrica: The Narcissism of Global Voluntourism […]
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