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Explore Your World: The Strange and Familiar Worlds of Discovery Channel's Nature Programming
David Pierson
Qualitative Studies Division 1999 A.E.J.M.C. Convention
David P. Pierson Ph.D. Candidate College of Communications Pennsylvania State University 302C, James Bldg. University Park, PA 16802
Home Phone: 814/235-9909 E-Mail: [log in to unmask] Explore Your World: The Strange and Familiar Worlds of Discovery Channel's Nature Programming
Abstract This paper asserts that the Discovery Channel's nature programs are structured by dialectical discourses of familiarity and strangeness. On the one hand, these programs invite viewers to evaluate animals through the human template of character and to impose the model of human social organization onto the natural world. On the other hand, because most animals are generally removed from the daily lives of most people, they can be appreciated as exotic, aesthetic object-subjects. Ultimately, this paper argues that the main problem with perceiving of animals in human or spectacular terms is that it becomes difficult to make environmental policy decisions not mired in the social and moral conflicts of western societies.
Explore Your World: The Strange and Familiar Worlds of Discovery Channel's Nature Programming
We cannot remember too often that when we observe nature, and especially the ordering of nature, it is always ourselves we are observing. - G.C. Lichtenberg, Aphorisms (1765)
Explore your world. - Discovery Channel promotional spot
Introduction
In 1995, the Discovery Channel celebrated its 10th anniversary as one of the most successful international cable television networks and cable brand franchises. During this same year, Discovery was named the Cable TV Marketer of the Year by Advertising Age for its innovative and integrated marketing efforts within an increasingly competitive cable television environment. Besides its expansive grouping of cable networks (Learning Channel, Animal Planet), the Discovery Channel's corporate acquisitions and marketing ventures include a nationwide chain of retail stores and future plans for a Discovery theme park and resort center (Fitzgerald 20). As with many new cable television networks, Discovery's road to financial stability and marketing success was filled with numerous twists and turns. The initial idea for the network came in 1982, when an American University professor asked John Hendricks to help him distribute a documentary film about world religions to other colleges and universities. As he investigated, Hendricks, founder of the Discovery Channel, discovered the existence of an abundance of old yet interesting documentaries gathering dust. To take advantage of this documentary plentitude, he formed Discovery's parent, Cable Educational Network, and began to acquire the broadcast rights to a diverse assortment of documentaries produced by outfits such as the Public Broadcasting Service. From its early inception, Discovery's programming centered primarily on nature, science, and natural history documentaries. In 1991, Discovery acquired the fiscally-ailing Learning Channel in a strategic move to shore up its lock on the educational cable niche (Lewyn 68). Its focus remains centered on educational programs, the humanities, ancient The Strange and Familiar Worlds of Discovery Channel's Nature Programming history and theoretical science, and has grown from 14 million viewers in 1991 to 43 million viewers in 1995 (Fitzgerald 20). Discovery's other cable networks include the Travel Channel and Animal Planet. For subscribers with access to expanded digital services, Discovery's digital networks include the Home & Leisure Channel, Civilization Channel, Science Channel, Health Channel, Wings Channel, Discovery en Espanol, and Discovery Channel for Kids. During a 1996 cable TV marketing conference, leading cable network executives reinforced the notion that, "effective branding means cultivating a network identity around a narrowly targeted concept with global appeal" (Littleton 56). Whether a cable network offers 24-hour news programming or classic Hollywood movies, the central goal of successful cable branding is to become recognized as a worldwide authority in a content field. Along with MTV and other cable networks, the Discovery Channel has sought to establish a global brand image, which is based on its perceived authority in educational and nonfictional documentary programming. "A brand is something that can be appreciated universally," said Greg Moyer, chief executive and creative officer of Discovery Communications. "We no longer think of ourselves solely as distributors, but that the heart and soul of our business is our brand" (Littleton 56). Hendricks asserts that one of the main reasons Discovery is such a success is because they were fortunate in claiming the "nonfictional cable niche first"(McElvogue 14). The market strength of Discovery's brand has allowed it to extend its cable and satellite networks into 40 countries and to expand its worldwide audience to over 80 million viewers (Wharton 20). While the previous information describes many of the corporate and economic deteminants of Discovery's programming, it does not really explain how the network produces and schedules programming which effectively engages its diverse array of viewers. In fact, Discovery explicitly and tacitly develops a recognizable "identity" across the range of its programming. The network also creates programs that enable viewers to form certain cognitive and affective connections to them. Bruce Gronbeck maintains that television network programmers and producers "tap" into existing pools of cultural knowledge and discourses to create television programs that engage their particular audiences (232-43). In order to understand how the Discovery Channel taps into a wide range of available social discourses and reworks, structures, and shapes them into TV programs and program schedules which enable viewers to create a multiplicity of meanings from them, this study will analyze a single week of prime-time programming on the network. By analyzing the programs within the program schedule, this study will determine the specific thematic discourses that are represented in this week of prime-time (8:00-11:00pm, E.S.T.) programming on the network.[1] In conducting this analysis, this study presumes that networks act as narrative agents in that they draw on a series of preexisting, socially produced discourses in the institutional process of producing and positioning programs within their program schedules (Kozloff 70). A counter-argument to the idea that networks are narrative agents is that the programs which comprise their schedules are often produced by production companies and independent producers who are not wholly affiliated with the network. But instead of engaging in the ongoing debates over who is the true author of TV programming (producer, director, actor-performer, production company), this study simply seeks to examine the discursive role of the network in producing, commissioning, and positioning TV programs within its program schedule. The network's main goals are vastly different from say the program producer or director, they not only need to attract viewers, but must sustain their interests across the range of its program schedule. Another possible point of contention in this study concerns the choice of selecting a single week of prime-time programming over two or more weeks, or perhaps an entire year of programming on the Discovery Channel. While analyzing a month or a full year of programming would definitely produce a wealth of useful information, arguably a single week of programming illustrates the primary discursive strategies of a cable television network. Though choosing another week for analysis would have certainly produced some program differences, it should be acknowledged that Discovery's programming consists of regularly scheduled anthology series (Wild Discovery, New Detectives). Because the network's daytime programming is dissimilar to its prime-time programming, this study will limit its claims to the network's prime-time program schedule. In order to determine the specific thematic discourses which underlie Discovery's prime-time programming, this study will reorder and restructure the programs into narrative subject areas (nature, science and technology) and then conduct an analysis of the central discourses represented in these programs. The final process of this study is reconstructing these discourses into identifiable discursive categories, which demonstrate a level of thematic unity. Michael McGuire argues that this process of reordering and reconstructing is the essence of structuralist criticism, "which seeks out thematic units and the relationships among them" (291). Because of space limitations, this paper will analyze the thematic discourses found within a week of Discovery's prime-time nature programming. With the immense popularity of series such as Wild Discovery, nature programs are the most visible and identifiable program genres on the network. The two main thematic discourses represented in Discovery's nature programs are: (1) Natural World as Familiar Domain; and (2) Natural World as Spectacle. The primary reason that these discourses are instrumental in understanding how the Discovery Channel engages its viewers and creates an identifiable cable identity is that they (discourses) are already a recognizable part of a viewer's social and imaginative worlds. These discourses do not just exist in Discovery's programming but are, in fact, represented in many other social and media forms. For instance, the discursive perspective of evaluating animals through human moral values (good, evil, lazy) is also represented in Hollywood films (The Lion King), circuses, children's books, songs, and other popular cultural forms. It should also be acknowledged that these thematic discourses have undeniable ideological and cultural implications for western societies. Natural World as Familiar Domain Margaret King, in her thematic analysis of Disney nature films, openly asserts that humans are continuously seeking out cultural patterns within the wider range of the animal kingdom and beyond to include plants and minerals, undersea life, and even the far reaches of outer space. The composite image of space aliens with their juvenilized, universal physical features (huge heads, large eyes, childlike size) are prime examples of the human impulse to seek out humanlike companions in the most unlikely of places. This same impulse leads people to perceive nature in human terms: how animals "enjoy" family life and reproduce; how younger animals "learn" a particular trade and learn to survive in a competitive wilderness. King claims that we set standards and values, and use the "human template of character" to evaluate "animal intelligence, beauty and virtue, diligence and playfulness, virtue and vice, suffering and reward, community and perdition, birth and death" (King 61). One of the most consistent cultural patterns present in Discovery's nature programs and in nature programs in general is the cultural concept of gender. One of the central assumptions made within early feminist scholarship is that there is a distinct difference between sex and gender. The assumption maintains that while biological sex is natural and innate, gender is a cultural construct. Feminist scholarship maintains that biological sex differences cannot account for the range of social meanings attached to gender (masculinity and femininity) and to the distribution of power and social position between men and women. But despite the overwhelming weight of academic theories and scholarship behind this perspective, the majority of people still tend to conceive of gender differences as natural and innately given. They tend to maintain that, beyond sexual differences, there is an underlying essential gendered dichotomy between men and women. The assumption that gender differences are natural and "God-given" is so ingrained in our social consciousness and social institutions that to perceive otherwise, carries with it undeniable social and political implications (Coltrane 45). The social tendency to essentialize gender differences is not just limited to men, or to the political right. There are some women writers who conceive of gender differences as being natural and timeless. For example, some cultural and eco-feminists, and neoconservative feminists conflate gender and sex to assert universal sex differences based on women's reproductive capabilities and their assumed closeness to nature. A comparable essentialist argument about men can be found in Robert Bly's popular Iron John. Bly theories that modern man has lost touch with his innate "Zeus energy" and therefore must participate in ancient "all-male" rituals to restore his natural self (Coltrane 45-6). The central flaw in mythopoetic and essentialist approaches to gender is that they use cultural and historically-determined myths and ancient practices to construct universal and biological truths, while ignoring the specific social contexts behind these myths and practices. The acceptance of the notion of a natural "masculine fierceness," along with an innate drive to validate assumed gender differences, carries with it the potential for violence directed at women and other men who challenge these assumptions. Even scientists are not exempt from observing and perceiving the natural world through the culturally-constructed lens of gender. Londa Schiebinger asserts that women were shut out of western science in the eighteenth century not because of the rise of scientific academies or the formalization of scientific procedures, but rather because women were perceived as being ill-equipped for the intellectual pursuits of scientific research and better suited for childbearing. Schiebinger points out that Linnaeus did not have to classify plant life based solely on "sexual" differences - the physical presence of the stamen, pistil and other parts. Nor did he have to classify mammals based on the physical characteristic of lactating breasts, he could have chosen other defining characteristics. She theorizes that these choices were made based on the prevaling eighteenth century preoccupation with defining differences among the sexes of human, animals, and plant life. The scientists were implicitly searching for justifications in nature for social divisions of the sexes in their societies. They were motivated by the social and political need to exclude women from the fields and occupations of science in order that they will attend to their prescribed roles as mothers and will bear children to support the European nation-states' colonial, political, and economic expansion throughout the world (Rogers 8-9). In a similar manner, contemporary natural scientists have been taken to task for carrying a number of gender-related assumptions into their research fields. Virginia Morell claims that many of the early male primatologists overlooked the role of the females in maintaining the social stability of the primate groups. Morrell relates that the groundbreaking studies of DeVore and Washburn led to a scientific view of the primate world as being filled with violence, political intrigue, and socially dominated by male primates fighting and competing for positions of power within the group. In contrast, the female "took on the look of primate June Cleavers: sexually passive, burdened with the care of their young, and valued primarily as sexual prizes for dominant males" (Morrell 428). However, in the past two decades, the field of primatology has seen the influx of women primarily drawn in part by the so-called "Trimates" - Jane Goodall, Dian Fossey, and Birute Galdikas - protegees of Louis Leakey. Since the 1960s there has been a dramatic reappraisal of some of the assumptions made by earlier primatologists concerning the social organization of primates and the discovery of the significant bonds which exist between female primates and the structure of primate groups. A few primatologists maintain that the "pendulum has swung so far the other way" that the field is facing a new orthodoxy. Jim Moore, a primatologist at the University of California, San Diego, argues that many recent research studies have made the claim that "all primate societies are female-bonded, just as people use to claim that they were all male-bonded" (Morrell 428-29). In acknowledging that sex and gender differences among men and women is still a critically contested social, cultural, and political issue in Western societies, it would seem "natural" to suggest that one of the most accessible and politically neutral domains by which to observe and contemplate these differences is the world of nature. It should be noted that while the social and behavioral characteristics of animals is dictated by their innate genetic instincts, human behavior is primarily structured by a complex array of cultural and social norms and contexts. Nevertheless, despite the specific physical and cognitive differences that exist between humans and animals, many people continue to seek out, unconsciously at least, gender patterns in nature. This apparent human impulse has not gone unnoticed by filmmakers and producers of so-called "nature films." In fact, both Disney's animated and documentary-style nature films feature a collection of animals with highly recognizable human gender-types from maternalistic and protective nature "mothers" (Bambi's doe-mother) to playful and rambunctious "boy" bear cubs. These patterns as well as others are also present in Discovery's nature programs. Beyond making animal subjects more accessible to viewers, these gender patterns tend to reinforce and "naturalize" many commonly held assumptions about the nature of men and women. In Discovery's nature programs, two predominant gender patterns are readily discernable to viewers - "Motherhood" and "Wild Males." In the natural world, the majority of female animals are born with reproductive capacities along with a range of innate maternal instincts, which are triggered by the conception and birth of their offspring. While human females naturally have innate reproductive capacities, there is much debate over the naturalness of mothering and whether women are indeed born with certain so-called "maternal instincts." Adria Schwartz points out that the concept of motherhood and the subject of mothers stands at the apex of arguments between biological essentialist and social construction of gender camps. As advanced reproductive technologies have proliferated throughout modern culture, there has been an intense struggle to understand these changes in light of the culture's common thoughts about "mothers, mothering, and motherhood" (Schwartz 241). For example, in what ways does the biomedical practice of in vitro fertilization and the implantation of the fertilized ova into a "surrogate womb" for gestation problematize and possibly conflict with traditional notions of motherhood? (Schwartz 240-41). Schwartz asserts that just as Judith Bulter deconstructs the supposedly unitary and universal category of women in Gender Trouble (1990), one could ask whether the term "mother" constitutes an unitary and a "stable signifier," which defines and controls all of those who become attached to it? Or is the term "mother" much like "woman" in that it tends to regulate and delimit existing gender relations, achieving stability and coherence only in its prescribed position within the domain of the traditional heterosexual family. Schwartz maintains that Butler's critique would suggest that the category of mother is a socially-constructed one based on the unstable category of gender. Butler argues that gender and sex do not necessarily maintain a fixed relationship with each other, primarily because the former is a social construct and the latter is biological. Therefore, the term 'masculine' may signify a female body and the term 'feminine' may just as easily signify a male body. Ultimately, Schwartz asserts that through Butler's critical perspective, one may conceive of a new definition of the term 'mother,' a term that is unconditional and unconstrained by the social dictates of gender (Schwartz 250-52). Although Schwartz demonstrates how the concept of mother can be deconstructed, particularly in relations to gender, one of the most pressing questions is explaining what psychological orientations lead to the reproduction of mothering by females in western cultures? Nancy Chodorow suggests that the traditional gendered and sexed model of nurturing mothers and nonnurturing fathers has become an integral part of a continuous process of identification and internalization. While this process usually begins within the confines of the family, a central facet of this identification process is the continuous production and circulation of dominant images of motherhood in culture (Chodorow 248-50). For centuries, a myriad of maternal images have been circulated in the art world in paintings, sculptures, architecture, and literary works. Today, maternal images not only circulate in the fine arts but are also disseminated across a wide range of mass media. It should be acknowledged that not all of these images were traditional. In fact, many of these images were ideologically contradictory to the dominant image of motherhood. However, in Discovery's nature programs, traditional images of motherhood are reproduced within the naturalizing domain of the animal kingdom. In the Wild Discovery episode, "Great Siberian Grizzly" (7/28/98) a mother grizzly leads her three bear cubs from their winter hibernation den on a long trek to a salmon-filled lake for the summer and then makes the perilous journey back to the den before the descent of winter. Invariably, the mother bear's maternalistic instincts are featured in a number of familiar scenarios from nursing her young cubs to fearlessly protecting her cubs from being attacked by adult male bears. On one particular occasion, the mother bear intimidates an adolescent male bear from advancing towards her three cubs. The bear is also represented as the ultimate in self-sacrificing mothers when she delays their agonizing, snow-swept journey back to the den for a day to care for one of her weakened cubs. The episode's voice-over narration highlights her sacrificial behavior: "mothers risk everything to give a fallen cub a chance." Maternal images also abound in other Wild Discovery episodes. In "Whitetail Country" (7/31/98) maternal images not only include a mother-doe nursing her newborn fawn, but the sight of a tender "mutual grooming" session between the doe and her young. In Sci-Tek's - The Science of Whales (8/1/98), the viewer learns that a newborn whale calf stays with her mother for a year or more. These episodes stress that in nature the female animals primary instinctual role is giving birth and caring for her young. As with the early primate studies, her social relations with other females and with the social group in general are usually de-emphasized in Discovery's nature programs. Another prevalent gender pattern found in Discovery's nature programs may best be described as the representation of "Wild Males." Mature male animals are represented as physically and sexually aggressive, combative and competitive with other males, and disassociated from and often hostile to the offspring of their own species. The social image of human males as "naturally" physically and sexually aggressive and inherently disassociated from any nurturing role is often used as ammunition by those assuming the biologically essentialist position towards sex and gender. While Bly and other followers of the mens' movement rely on figures from ancient Greek, Roman, and Native American mythologies to construct their masculine ideals, these social ideals generally rest on the timeless categorization of "Man-the-Hunter" and spiritual wanderer-seeker of new knowledge (Coltrane 45-6). One of the central problems with these gendered conceptions is that women in these ancient and past cultures were relegated to domestic and nurturing roles in society. In the Wild Discovery episode, "Whitetail Country" the voice-over narration explains that a strict social structure undergrids a herd of whitetail deer. This rigid power structure dictates that subordinate bucks must avoid eye contact with dominant bucks. These dominant bucks use their superior size to intimidate any rivals and to maintain their dominant positions. On a rare occasion, a buck intent on defending his doe must participate in a one-on-one antiller fight with a rival buck. While the loser of the fight must leave the area, the "victor buck" is said to strengthen the genetic lineage of the deer population. In The Science of Whales, the narration points out that a similar power structure exists with whales in which one male challenges another established male for mating rights with the female. As with the bucks, the male whales fight one-on-one against each other with a series of brutal headbutts until the other dies or leaves the area. And, as with the bucks, the consequence of this violent encounter is that the male is "rewarded" with the mating rights with the females. While these episodes accurately present a central facet of the existing social and power structures within these species, their continued stress on the more aggressive and power-related practices of the males tends to perpetuate the social perception that all male animals (including humans) are predominantly "Wild Males" at heart. King, in her analysis of Disney's True-Life nature films, asserts that one of the central themes of these films is the anthropomorphizing of the entire spectrum of nature including animal and plant life. The broad template of human social organization, with its inscribed concerns, morals and values, are imposed onto the natural world. Disney extends its anthromorphic slant by creating animal "stars" and providing them with names, often human names: Flash, the Teenage Otter (1965) and Perri (1957) a film biography of a squirrel. On one level, the viewer is asked to assume that these names are comparable to other facets of nature. One primary anthropomorphic technique is to narratively construct the film's central animals as emphatic "characters" with clearly discernable personalities. For example, in Disney's The Incredible Journey (1963), the live-action film story of three pets making their long way back home could have just as easily featured three human characters, with their own idiosyncrasies, personal goals, and distinctive character traits. But for the viewer, cats and dogs give the story an added dimension - "the nature dimension" (King 64-65). This anthropomorphic penchant for constructing animals into characters is also present in Discovery's nature programs. For example, the Wild Discovery episode, "Great Siberian Grizzly" is primarily structured by two simultaneous storylines. The main story concerns a mother grizzly bear and her three cubs, and their long springtime trek to a salmon-filled lake and their perilous snowy journey back to the winter den. The secondary story concerns an adolescent bear's crucial life struggle to master the art of catching salmon in order to put on enough body weight to survive the long winter hibernation. Both of these storylines follow a familiar chronological narrative as it traces the animals progression from springtime back to the winter den. Through the continual incorporation of intimate close-up shots accompanied by a voice-over narration which details the animal's specific behavior and motivations, these animals are effectively transformed into dramatic characters for the viewing audience. While this episode does describe the activities of other wildlife in Kamchatka, it primarily presents dual narratives featuring the mother grizzly and her cubs, and the vital life lessons of a single adolescent bear. Though the Discovery Channel stops short of personally naming its animals and does portray them in a less sentimental manner than Disney, nevertheless many of its nature programs focus on the character-like storylines of one or more animals. Another anthropomorphic technique is to use familiar human terms to describe acts of nature. In the Wild Discovery episode, "Baboons" (7/26/98) the voice-over narration characterizes baboons in such morally judgmental terms as "criminals," "beggars," and "victims." The program's narrative involves the social, economic, and environmental problems associated with the baboon population, within a Kenyan national park, and its close proximity to the Kenyan people. A central facet of the episode's narrative concerns the baboons destructive and economic damage to local farm crops, which borders the park. In this segment, the visual rhetoric and narration constructs the moral image of these baboons as "raiders" committing a "crime" by "stealing" corn in the fields. This sense of transgressing against humans is further reinforced by a dramatic sequence in which baboons invade a village home and damage private property in their search for food. In other narrative segments in this episode, a troop of baboons "beg on the streets" for food and "exploit" the interests of roadside tourists who stop alongside a Kenyan highway, while another segment presents the repulsive image of baboons fighting among themselves and scavengering for food in the smoldering remains of a Kenyan hotel's burning trash dump. In socially constructing these baboons as human-like criminals, vagrants, and beggars it would seem reasonable and perhaps morally justifiable to punish and reform them into good citizen baboons. But, in a contradictory manner, these same baboons are also represented as "victims." As an annual effort to protect their villagers' farm crops, the Kenyan government either traps or shoots "problem baboons" who periodically escape from the national park. The victimization of these baboons is emotionally dramatized through a tight close-up shot of a caged baboon with an extremely pained, fearful expression on his face. The narration also informs the viewer that many of these baboons end up as subjects in medical research labs and postulates whether the benefits to humankind can ever compensate for their suffering. This episode illustrates the particular and often confusing dilemma of perceiving nature and its animals in predominantly human and morally normative terms. This tendency of anthropomorphizing animals includes the way in which individual animals are constructed and perceived by viewers. The majority of animals in nature programs tend to fall within the confines of what can be called the cuteness/repulsiveness dichotomy. On the one hand, certain animals (lions, bears, whales) are valued for their aesthetic beauty and form. Traditionally, humans are attracted to animals that have the evolutionary juvenilization of biological features. These features include large eyes, protruding cranium, and retreating demonstrative baby releasers in its juvenile appearance. On the other hand, animals with an adult alien appearance, lack of baby releasers in its juvenile appearance, and employ senses outside of human abilities are associated with negative values (Papson 73). These negative values may be translated into emotional reactions like disgust and repulsion. Kellert asserts that the list of species disliked by Americans include "the cockroach, mosquito, rat, wasp, rattlesnake, bat, vulture, and shark" (21). This type of dichotomy is represented in many of Disovery's nature programs. When a young bear cub dies in "Great Siberian Grizzly," his death is not only a family tragedy but, in fact, represents a preordained form of spiritual death. The voice-over narration poetically explains that when the young cub dies his "soul will return to the Kamchatka mountains." In effect, this small bear cub is granted the same level of spirituality normally reserved for humans and their deities. But while bear cubs are valued to the extent of being endowed with spiritual souls, other animals are so reviled and physically repulsive that we tend to associate them with moral "evil." In Discovery's Movie Magic episode, "Snakes, Snakes and More Snakes" (7/28/98) several experts attempt to understand why most people are scared of snakes. One expert theorizes that people unconsciously fear snakes because of their disturbing tube-shaped design and their innate ability to swallow their victims whole. He elaborates that snakes are like "traveling esophaguses." Despite the program's best efforts to demystify the rationale behind people's dread of snakes, it still continues to emphasize the same negative attributes which are socially attached to the animals. For instance, the narration not only informs the viewer that the African black mambo has an inherent nasty disposition that leads it to attack without provocation, but that it is "the most dangerous snake in the world." David Bell, a herpetologist, who served as a consultant on the film Venom (1982), temporarily departs from his scientific descriptions of the mambo's behavior to question why God ever put such a deadly creature on the earth. One of the most prevalent themes in nature programs is a persistent stress on nature's intrinsic hierarchal structure. In Discovery's nature programs, this structure is often referred to as the "Great Chain of Being." In this chain, the natural world is perceived as a sort of grand circular food chain, in which every species both dominates and is dominated by another. At the top of this hierarchal structure are humans followed by the other warm-blooded mammals. Foucault reminds us that the Enlightenment perception of nature as an ordered and functional hierarchy is actually a discursive formation created by humans seeking to impose their sense of order onto the natural world. He further points out that our very understandings and realizations of the natural world are invariably circumscribed and limited by the structure of our own language systems (Foucault 153). Because all language is metaphoric to "outside of skin" reality, perceiving nature as a great chain of being is no less valid than observing it as a Newtonian mechanism or a living social organism. Also because humans have a historical and cultural tendency of imposing their own social organization onto the natural world, it should come as no surprise that nature is seen as a familiar social world. In many ways, nature's perceived hierarchal structure mirrors the socio-economic stratification undergriding late-twentieth-century modern capitalism. And just as the social structure of the whitetail deer is represented as a patriarchal order in which dominant males compete for social and genetic dominance within a single herd, a similar power struggle exists among humans within an increasingly social darwinistic global capitalist system. While the spoils for the dominant bucks includes a "harem" of does and the continuation of their genetic heritage, the perceived common-sense rewards for dominant humans includes social, economic, and sexual success. Another familiar discourse often associated with modern capitalism is that of gambling. Capitalism is frequently perceived as a complex, risky game of identifiable winners and losers, in which a majority of new business ventures fail every year. A similar gambling discourse is used to explain why some species survive over others. In Discovery's The Extinction Files (7/27/98), despite the program's determined scientific discourse, the narration frequently employs the discourse of gambling to remind viewers that species evolution and extinction are primarily driven by chance and luck. For instance, during the late Cretaceous period, the demise of the dinosaurs and the mass extinction of seventy-six percent of the species on earth provides a forum for the mammals to emerge as "winners" and assume "center-stage" in the evolutionary game. It should be noted that evolutionary changes are never absolutes and, in fact, involve a certain level of indeterminacy. But the program's continued reliance on a gambling discourse portrays the evolutionary process as a type of natural lottery in which there are clear winners and losers. The nature program's discursive themes concerning evolving winners and losers of its hierarchal structure leads to its stress on the darwinian aspects of species adaptability and the survival of the fittest. In "Great Siberian Grizzly," for example, a bear cub's apparent "passive" nature implicitly leads to the cub's eventual demise. And as an adolescent bear struggles to catch swimming salmon during Kamchatka's evanescent summer, the program's narrator informs the viewer that the bear's very survival depends on his mastery of this task. In many ways, Discovery's nature programs interconnects to the general cultural enthusiasm for biological and genetic explanations for human behavior. Paula Fass asserts that despite the fact that most social scientists acknowledge that social and cultural processes have had a dramatic impact on the development of the human brain and the expression of its thought processes and thereby forever altering genetic determinism, contemporary media is filled with stories about the discovery of a new gene and the further advancement of understanding and controlling human life and behavior. This progressive march towards the genetic domination and control of human life is best exemplified by the continued work of the human genome project. She proclaims that it is ironic that the main promise offered by the project is increased human control over the same genetic domain that was once publicly and academically scorned for its biological determinism (Fass 238-39; Cole 456-57). According to King, one of the central issues posed in the nature film is defining the proper relationship between humans and nature. What other types of relationships are possible other than the older "exploiter/exploited model"? (King 61). These relationships involve a number of relevant issues including hunting and preservation, conservation and animal husbandry, and protecting select animal and plant species (King 61). But before one can address these issues one must first define nature. Macnaghten and Urry suggest that most people take for granted that strictly speaking there is no such thing as one single identifiable "nature," there are only natures. These different versions of nature establish the boundaries for ongoing debates over the social meaning of nature and humankind's proper relationship to it. Szerszynski outlined two distinct ways in which nature has been conceived. The first, is the conception of nature as a threatened realm. This conception can be seen in the public concern over endangered species, the idea of nature as an exhaustible resource worthy of conservation, and the perception of nature as a pure and healthy body being constantly threatened by human-made pollution (Macnaghten 22). This social conception of nature as a threatened realm is represented in many of Discovery's nature programs. In this conception, humans are implicitly represented as having ultimate power and control over nature. Unchecked, this control often becomes a destructive force against nature. In the episode, "Baboons" the narrator exemplifies the extend of this control when he solemnly asserts that "humans have altered the world beyond all recognition." In the Wild Discovery episode,"The Island of the Apes" (7/29/98) the African villagers seasonal damming of a river to dig for diamonds has disastrous environmental consequences for the indigenous fish and the spot neck otter. Later, in the episode, the viewer also learns that "monkey hunting" is not only a big business in neighboring Serra Leone, but that the hunters are threatening the very survival of the primate population on the tiny island of Teeya. Szerszynski's second conception of nature is as a sacred realm filled with great moral and spiritual power, a place to be enjoyed and worshiped by humans. As with the first, this conception may come in many guises: nature as a place of beauty and sublimity, nature as an aesthetic and spectacular object, nature as a place for relaxation and recreation, nature as an inexhaustible resource for moral, physical, and spiritual healing, and nature as a peaceful sanctity from the moral and spiritual ravages of modern and industrialized social life (Macnaghten 22-3). In Discovery's nature programs, nature is sometimes represented as a great eternal entity. In "Siberian Grizzly," the episode's picturesque visual rhetoric and narration work together to present the animals of Kamchatka as being a part of the perpetual great chain of being including every creature from "bear-to-eagle." The death of an animal is seen as just a part of this great cycle: "salmon are the lords - they die so others can live." At the end of this episode, the narrator calls on humans to learn from this great cycle in Kamchatka, a near eternal place where one encounters "innocent animals" which have existed since the Ice Age. He states that the "great bears can teach us so much we have forgotten." This episode conceives nature as an all-knowing, God-like teacher with the inexhaustible capacity to restore and renew humankind's place within the universe. In this conception, humans are humbled into being just one of nature's creatures. The central danger in perceiving nature as an eternal entity is that one easily overlooks the impact humans continue to have on the natural world (McKibben 1-8). A third set of representations of nature constructs it as an open-air laboratory or a field for scientific inquiry. While this conception of nature may readily acknowledge many of the same assumptions of the "nature as threatened" representations, it primarily maintains that nature is a realm that can be managed and controlled through modern science and conservation. Lowe points out that in the early part of the twentieth-century there were early tensions between preservationists who desired to leave nature in its original wild state, and ecologists who were apt to regard nature and nature reserves as sites for scientific inquiry. By the end of the second world war, there emerged a consensus among the western scientific community that wildlife and conservation issues came to be incorporated within the new rational, planned order (Macnaghten 38-40). This conception of nature is represented in Discovery's nature programs. Because one of the main components of modern science is empirical observation, surveillance becomes one of the primary tasks of the scientist studying the natural world. Surveillance is necessary not only for the rudimentary function of counting, categorizing, and describing all forms of animal and plant life, but to use this information to make conservationist decisions about whether to alter nature's natural habitat or its biological conditions. For instance, in Discovery's Jaws in the Mediterranean (7/29/98) natural scientists rely on numerous methods to survey the "shark ecology" of the great white shark in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea. These methods include measuring the size of small sharks at a local village fishmonger's market to studying the great white's available food supply of seals and dolphins. Later, in the episode, the scientists continue their surveillance efforts by tagging blue sharks in order to track their growth and migration patterns. In some cases, scientists actively intrude into the behavioral and biological functions of animal life. In the Discovery News (7/31/98) news story, "Honey Bees Under Attack," scientists help Floridian farmers by "teaching" American honey bees to eat the eggs of the South African black beetle which threatens the production of their beehives. Natural World as Spectacle If the Discovery Channel's nature programming frequently constructs a domain that is reassuringly "familiar" to viewers, it also presents a world that is undeniably "strange." It is a world that frequently exists in the most geographically extreme terrains (from civilization) and is often perceived as an inhospitable environment for human life. In other words, these distant, exotic geographic locations are counterpoised to the comforting domestic spheres, which comprise the urban and suburban worlds of its viewers. For instance, "Siberian Grizzly" begins with a series of shots of a snow-ladden, mountainous, barren terrain, with the voice-over narrator informing the viewer that the Russian Peninsula of Kamchatka "is one of the world's best-kept natural history secrets. . . remote and isolated." The exoticness and spectacle of this locale is further emphasized by its visual imagery, heavily dramatic music, and narration which informs the viewer that Kamchatka is a land containing thirty-three active volcanos, huge glaciers, and is riddled with smoke-filled thermo beds. The narration highlights the terrain's mysteriousness and timelessness by calling it a place of "primordial heat." Although a vastly different type of landscape, the tropical island of Teeya in the episode "The Island of the Apes" is just as foreign and strange to Western viewers. This island sits in the middle of the Moa River in the country of Serra Leone in West Africa. The island is further differentiated as the only island with a dense rainforest and the only one (rainforest) left from the Upper Guinea Forest. The island's uniqueness is further identified as having one of the largest concentrated primate populations in the world. From the program's outset, the narration implicitly reminds the viewer that they are receiving a rare glimpse into an unfamiliar and exciting natural area. In fact, the Menda, a nearby West African tribe, are said to protect the island from foreigners and hunters and worship the island as a "sacred place." However it should be noted that not all Discovery nature programs feature exotic, foreign, and faraway locations to explore diverse animal life. The episode, "Whitetail Country," for example, is located in the woodlands of North America and documents the attributes and behavioral characteristics of the whitetail deer. But despite the more familiar aspects of the huge deer population in certain regions in North America, most people have little direct experience with deers. For the vast majority of people, their primary experiences with indigenous wildlife (deers, bears) is chiefly defined by humanly-created animal zoos, circuses, and theme parks. Therefore, this episode still offers viewers an unusual up-close yet mediated experience of whitetail deers in their natural habitat. Because the animals featured in nature programs are marginal to the lives of most of us, one of the most pressing questions is why viewers are attracted to images of animals who have no relationship to their everyday lives? Aside from their perceived marginality, sharks, bears, snakes, and other animals evidently have television audiences. Stephen Papson suggests that one way to address this question is to focus on the cultural relevance of the information. For instance, knowledge about a particular animal has cultural relevance when it becomes essential for everyday life. For South Pacific islanders, knowledge about sharks and their natural habitat is crucial for their daily existence. When the animal is part of the physical environment, it becomes assimilated into the cultural system which maintains its adaptability with the natural environment (Papson 77-8). Papson points out that, in western societies, animals have been physically and cultural marginalized from modern life. Ultimately, the processes of modernization, industrialization, and urbanization continue to divide the relationship between animal and humans and this has led to a more fragmented, aesthetized form of relations. Papson argues that if cultural salience is lacking in relation to the natural world, a new salience develops based on aesthetization and spectacularization (78). This process of aesthetization reflects the separation of the object or subject from the experience of everyday life. Macnaghten and Urry point out that in England, by the end of the eighteenth century, a select few areas like the English Lake District were tamed for aesthetic consumption and that nature was turned into a visual spectacle. While the Lake District was one of the first natural sites to be turned into "beautiful," it had been regarded as a rugged and untamed region just a few decades earlier. They point out that even Daniel Defoe viewed the English Lake District as one of the "wildest, most barren and fruitful" places he had ever visited. In fact, up until the latter part of the eighteenth century nature was conceived as a wild and hostile domain. Macnaghten and Urry relate that nature was frequently perceived as an inhospitable place filled with "impenetrable forests, fearsome wild animals, unscalable mountains and ravines, hostile demons and appalling odors issuing from the bowels of the earth, especially through the orifices of swamps and marshes" (Macnaghten 114). Central to the spectacularization of nature were the development of various visual discourses, including the sublime, which enabled the most frightening aspects of nature to be reconceived and reformulated into a subjective aesthetic experience. Macnaghten and Urry relate that these discourses were derived from the aesthetic concepts of Kant and Burke. Burke theorizes that the sublime is a complex experience, involving simultaneous feelings of terror and pleasure. He maintains that in order for an individual to overcome the terrifying aspects of the sublime, she must redirect this intense energy to symbolically remove herself from the threatening object. The sublime involves a strong affective response to rugged and untamed landscapes, rapidly flowing rivers, crashing seawaves, and jagged rock ledges and overhangs that were perceived threatening to humans. The discourse of the sublime includes the widespread use of descriptive terms like "desolate, wild, primaeval, hideous, frightful, and astonishing" (Macnaghten 114). At the outset of the nineteenth century there was a gradual proliferation of discourses which came to view nature as a visual spectacle. These discourse came to perceive nature as a site filled with beautiful scenery, expansive landscapes, and a host of insatiable perceptual pleasures. Macnaghten and Urry claim that these discourses were influenced by the popular musings of the Romantic writers who constructed nature as a place of leisurely pursuits, touristic pleasures, and as a solace from the coarse environment of the industrial cities. These discourses also functioned as legitimators for socially constructing diverse parts of nature into entertaining spectacles from dramatic landscapes to picturesque meadows to turbulent seascapes. These same visual discourses also legitimated the transformation of nature's most terrifying animals (lions, elephants) into visual spectacles and aesthetically pleasing objects of nature. This aesthetization and spectacularization process was extended with the advent of photography. Photography, as a new communication medium, helped to construct a new aesthetic discourse as to what aspects of nature were worth "sightseeing" (scenic vistas, exotic animals), along with excluding many elements from this discursive process. Macnaghten and Urry further argue that photography's affect on nature is best illustrated in the ways in which "the snapshot transforms the resistant aspect of nature into something familiar and intimate, something we can hold in our hands and memories. In this way, the camera allows us some control over the visual environments of our culture" (116). In Discovery's nature programs, the visual rhetoric and narration work together to re-present a natural landscape, occurrence (volcano, earthquake) or an animal (lion, scorpion) as a spectacular yet intimate aesthetic object available to be scrutinized by the viewer. As a perceptual object, the animal or natural phenomena can be valued primarily for its more visually-oriented physical and material qualities. Spectacularization is achieved primarily because these animal characteristics are presented as distinctly nonhuman and "otherly." These programs by focusing on an animal's physical and instinctual characteristics often neglect to explore other aspects including its cognitive functions and its larger position within the world's changing eco-system. The most prominent physical characteristics featured in Discovery's nature programs are an animal's adaptability to its environment and its predatory abilities. In terms of adaptation, an animal's adaptability is liken to an art object, in which form follows function. In the episode, "Baboons," for example, the narrator marvels at the resourcefulness and adaptability of baboons to survive in a number of distinct environments. He points out that in a Kenyan nature reserve filled with plentiful rivers and creeks baboons have learned to swim underwater in order to crossover to the other side. The episode stresses that the baboons remarkable adaptability even extends to their survival within man-made environments including motor roadways and the grounds of a tourist hotel. In the episode, "The Red Desert" a large number of species are highlighted for their unique naturally adaptable designs. These species include "solar-powered" lizards which are innately designed for the harsh desert climate primarily because they are encased in waterproofed scales. Because the lizard's scales need to be heated by the sun, its physical design is well-suited for high-speed predatory activities. During the daytime the salty basin of Yurallan is an inferno with tempartures soaring to 140 degrees fahrenheit yet even here some animals manage to do well but only after sunset. A unique insect called the tiger beetle spends its entire lifespan on the salt basin. The beetle's long-limbs enable it to achieve quick speeds to capture and live off of insects blown in from the savannah. Furthermore, in the episode, "Whitetail Country" a whitetail newborn fawn is uniquely designed to hide itself from its potential predators (wolves, coyotes). The fawn's coat is naturally camophlaged to easily blend into the natural environment. As with the desert hedgehog, the fawn's sensitive sense of hearing enables it to detect a nearby predator. Upon detecting a close intruder, the fawn instinctually lies still and motionless in tall grass and gives off very little body scent. The episode represents the whitetail deer as an aesthetic animal-object naturally designed for its North American habitat. Because the deer's innate instincts and features are completely distinct from human traits, these characteristic differences serve as spectacular attractions for television viewers. The second prominent physical characteristic represented in many of Discovery's nature programs is an animal's inherent predatory and hunting abilities. In fact, the predatory nature of animals is highlighted in the opening sequence of the popular Wild Discovery series. This sequence consists of a fast-paced montage of animals (lions, crocodiles) charging directly at the camera. This sequence, which frames the series, both illustrates and reminds the viewer that the program features wild, untamed animals. The term "wild" signifies the opposite meaning of tame, domestic, and civilized, which are traits normally associated with the suburbanized and urbanized worlds of the network's viewers. This predatory characteristic is further emphasized within the narratives of the nature programs. In "Red Desert" the sand boa constrictor, though only 8 inches long, has eyes on the top of its head and is perfectly designed to glide beneath the sand in order to ambush its prey. The boa then proceeds to squeeze the life out of its prey. The episode also features the tiny pieballed shrew, described by the narrator as a lethal "gray and white assassin." Despite its miniature size, the shrew does not hesitate to attack a locust twice its own size. After dispatching its prey, the tiny shrew is able to get enough moisture from the bodily fluids of its victims to survive for days without water. In "Siberian Grizzly," the narrator dramatically and painstakingly outlines the natural predatory features of the Siberian Grizzly bear: ". . . ripping teeth, 5-inch claws - they are killers." The episode demonstrates the predatory traits of the grizzly through segments showing the bears hunting and killing lake salmon and caribou. Another means by which an animal's predatory abilities are highlighted and turned into a visual spectacle is to socially construct the animal as an explicit threat and danger to humans. Despite the fact that shark attacks are rare and that the likelihood of an attack is less than being struck by lightning, Discovery's Jaws of the Mediterranean continually relies on the threat of a shark attack to engage its viewers. The program begins its documentary-style narrative by featuring a dramatic re-enactment of a 1956 shark attack near Malta on the Mediterranean Sea in which a man is fatally attacked by a great white shark. Besides intense dramatic music, the program relies on a number of fictional techniques to heighten the dramatic fear of a shark attack. For example, to highlight the shark's imminent threat to swimmers in the Mediterranean the program employs the same shark's-eye point-of-view shot of the swimmers as the popular 1975 feature film Jaws. This fictional film technique along with the program's title "Jaws" not only furnishes an accessible intertextual reference for viewers but also provides another framework (fictional) by which to view and interpret the program. In another shark attack incident, an Italian fire chief claims that the only "signs" left of a diver's fatal encounter with a great white are the indentations left on the diver's steel air tanks. The diver's body was never found. The program also presents the great white as an historically-situated creature whose officially recorded attacks on humans in the Mediterranean date back at least to the turn of the century. In 1909, a newspaper story reports that forty people were attacked by sharks, with eighteen fatalities. On the one hand, the program presents the great white shark as a threat to humans and other sea life (dolphins). On the other hand, it also presents the great white as a "victim" of Italian pollution in the Adriatic Sea in which the loss of its food supply (tuna, dolphins) threatens its own survival. In a similar manner, while the Movie Magic's episode "Snakes, Snakes and More Snakes" illustrates how Hollywood has exploited "our fears" of snakes in feature films, at the same time, the narrative continues to rely on the threat of snakes to engage its viewers. And though the episode details how Hollywood employs the latest in computer animation and animatronic technologies to create realistic snakes that are scarier and more menacing than nature, nonetheless it continues to refer to snakes as "nature's most hated creatures" and the "least human of all creatures." Throughout the episode's narrative descriptions of Hollywood's creation of deadly filmic snakes are interspersed anecdotal stories of actual near death experiences with snakes. One story describes the perilous scenario of an animal trainer who's heart stopped after his body was squeezed by a giant python. The trainer, though pronounced clinically dead, was revived by paramedics when they restarted his heart and saved his life. Snakes are also perceived as aesthetic objects that in some ways are superior to humans. A professional snake wrangler comments that the black mambo "survives much better than we can - they are perfect." In a few cases, Discovery's nature programs construct animals that may or may not still exist as potential threats and dangers to humans. In the Into the Unknown episode, "God Bear of Kamchatka" (7/30/98) scientific statements by natural scientists and computer animation are used to depict the immense physical dimensions of the great Ice Age bear: "three times the size of the American bear; stands nine feet tall at shoulder; and weighs two-and-a-half thousand pounds." The only proof of the possible existence of the ancient bear are a few scattered personal accounts and folk stories of people living in the Russian Providence of Kamchatka. Despite the preponderance of scientific evidence that the bear is extinct, the episode's narrative repeatedly highlights the bear's physical superiority over humans. For instance, Dr. Chris Cooper, a kinesiologist, asserts that humans "could not of survived these large predators" and that "humans could not escape the bear - the bear was faster than the horse." This point is further illustrated with footage showing that even a well-trained athlete pushed to his limits cannot achieve enough speed to escape the charging bear. A computer animation segment depicts the God Bear attacking a tribe of early cavemen. The narrator points out that the caveman's stone tools and weapons were simply no match for the huge ancient bear. While the episode's narrative highlights the ongoing debate over whether the God Bear still exists, nonetheless one of its primary attractions is the spectacle of the great bear as a perceived threat to humans.. Another thematic discourse represented in the "God Bear" program (as well as others) is the timeless theme of humans struggling against the forces of nature. These forces may include wild animals (bears, lions) and natural phenomena (earthquakes, hurricanes). Although modern technoscience has given humans an almost indomitable control over the forces of nature, Discovery's science and nature programs focus much of their narrative concerns on the enduring human struggles with the natural world. In World of Wonder (7/31/98), for example, a news story depicts humankind's eternal and mythic struggle with the "most lethal of all natural disasters - floods." The story begins by reminding viewers that the "great flood" was a pivotal force of nature in the Bible. Though the story details the efforts of scientists and engineers to predict flood patterns, its narrative primarily consists of indelible images of nature's destructiveness. These images include a father and son swept away by the flood waters of a Texas river, a pickup truck literally washed off a road, and an entire town devastated by massive river flooding. The scientists' work is given mythic proportions when the narrator dramatically informs the viewer that they (scientists) are engaged in a "historic epic battle with nature." Conclusions What are the ideological and social implications of Discovery's nature programs' perceptions of the natural world as both familiar and strange domains? While these programs do provide factual information about animals, they also rely on the "human template of character" to perceive animals in moral and normative terms, and to engage their viewers on a dramatic and emotional level. These programs also tap into the viewer's knowledge of human social organization to impose this hierarchal social order to the "animal kingdom." The animal world is represented as a highly dramatic realm filled with close-knit families, external conflicts, and intense competitions - in other words, a world not unlike the one inhabited by Discovery's middle-class, suburban viewers. For the most part, these social representations of the animal world tend to reinforce the dominant social and cultural conceptions of social class and gender in the human world. If animals are valued for their human-like qualities, they are also valued for their non-human and strange attributes. Because these animals are generally removed from the daily lives of the viewers, they can be more easily appropriated as aesthetic, and exotic object-subjects, to be primarily appreciated for their physical and instinctual qualities (hunting, reproducing). The main problem with perceiving of animals in anthropomorphic or spectacular terms is that it becomes increasingly difficult for people not to impose their moral and social assumptions onto the natural world. In effect, public policy decisions concerning animal and plant life, and the natural environment become inescapably mired in the moral and social universe of human communities. Nature, or the natural world is frequently conceived in both diverse and contradictory conceptions in Discovery's nature programs. These conceptions include nature as an eternal moral and spiritual balm for modern life; nature as a victim to industrialization, pollution, and human manipulation; and nature as a field of scientific and conservationist endeavors, or as a domain necessitating preservation and protection from human societies. These conceptions of nature are contradictory primarily because people have diverse perceptions of the natural world and their relations to it. For example, a deer-hunter will have a different perspective of nature and the need for land and animal conservation than a person whose primary contact with non-domestic animal life is a visit to the city zoo, or viewing a television nature program. These conceptions represent the ongoing struggle in late-twentieth-century modern life to repeatedly evaluate and define humankind's relationship to the natural world.
Notes
1. This study of the Discovery Channel and its programming is part of an unpublished dissertation research study in which I analyze the thematic discourses represented in a week of prime-time programming on three leading cable television networks. Because of the obvious space limitations which accompany conference papers, this study will focus its analysis on the thematic discourses represented in a week of Discovery's prime-time nature programming. The primary data source for this study is prime-time programming (8:00-11:00pm, E.S.T.) from Sunday (July 26, 1998) to Saturday (August 1, 1998) on the U.S. Discovery Channel. This programming was recorded onto videocassettes in order to facilitate a close textual analysis of the programs.
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