From the Boidem -
an occasional column on computers and information technologies in everyday
life
July 22, 1997*: A
Moment of Silence - On Virtual Mourning
Getting news of someone's death is always a disheartening
experience. Whether we read about it in the papers, or are informed by
friends, whether the death is due to natural causes or has been sudden
and unexpected, it saddens us. And this is so even when we don't know the
person who has died. If we have no connection to the person who has died,
or to his or her family, we're not expected to express ourselves, whereas
if we have known the person in question others expect of us, and we expect
of ourselves, that we somehow take part in the mourning. The rituals called
upon here don't differ whether we knew the deceased from school, from work,
from family, or from any other social setting. Is that also the case when
our acquaintance with the deceased is solely virtual? Recently I had the
opportunity to examine that question.*
The story starts with a distressing e-message that arrived
on the horn players' list to which Tzippi subscribes:
Subject: death of NIcole Taylor PLEASE send me unsubscribe directions!!!!!!!!!
Date: Mon, 28 Jul 1997 09:23:09 -0600
From: taylorjn@flash.net (Nicole and Jennifer Taylor)
To: HORN@spock.nlu.edu
To all Nicole's horn list friends,
Nicole was a fatality in an autobmobile accident Friday, July 25.
If you have been a correspondent of Nicole's, you know music and horn were
the passion of her life. She enjoyed her correspondence on this list so,
so much. You all have given her great advice and comfort on everything
from horn & music selection to school problems. Thank you for adding
that dimension to life. Nicole is loved by many. I regret that she will
not get the opportunity to move on to college and a performing career.
All who have known her have been blessed.
I really need someone to email me the directions for unsubscribing
to this list. Please send the directions to my email address: taylors@flash.net
Thank you and keep us in your prayers,
Susan Taylor, Nicole's mom
Though I hadn't followed Nicole's participation on the horn
list, and didn't even know her virtually, let alone personally, this message
was very saddening. But it also caused more than a little ambivalence.
Here was an example of the communicative power of e-mail, of its ability
to spread the word incredibly quickly, yet it was also an example of how
e-mail doesn't distinguish between the lofty and the banal; for within
one message, posted altogether three days after the fatal accident, not
only were the members of the list informed of what had happened, but they
were also asked to help in the technicalities of signing off a mailing
list. While still in the very early stages of mourning, Nicole's mother
requests details on closing her daughter's account, and does so as a sort
of aside in an otherwise very moving message. My antennae told me something
interesting was happening here.
The first reply was posted the same day by one of the
more active members of the list. It reflected, once again, the duality
of e-messages:
Subject: Unsubscription (Nicole)
Date: Mon, 28 Jul 1997 18:27:35 +0200
From: "Thomas Nielsen" <thomasn@danbbs.dk>
To: <taylors@flash.net>
CC: "HL" <horn@spock.nlu.edu>
Dear Susan Taylor,
I'm very very sorry to hear about the death of your daughter, my
condolences. I think I speak for the entire list, when I say that Nicole
was (well, at least appeared to be) a very nice person, and it is with
great loss to us all, that she has departed us like that. I, myself enjoyed
her postings, as I believe a lot of the other hornlisters did. And her
trust to confide in the list when she had problems with her director.
The thing to do, to get unsubscribed from the hornlist is to send
a mail to majordomo@spock.nlu.edu with no subject, containing the following
lines
unsubscribe horn
which
where the 'which' command will make it clear whether or not the
address is subscribed - Note that you must send it from her address to
unsubscribe her address.
Very Sincerely, and with great sorrow :-(
Thomas Nielsen
Ps. I'm sorry to ask you this at this time, but do you have a picture
of Nicole, we can scan, to be put on the hornlist picturepage in remembrance
of Nicole, I think it would be great if you do, and also ok if you don't,
but please think it over.
Here was a kindly worded condolence message, just like any
other that we might find inside a slightly garish card with a picture of
a bouquet of flowers on it. Yet in addition to the message of condolence,
and right next to it, we find an explanation of the unsubscribing process.
Perhaps I'm being pedantic, but were I Nicole's mother I think that I would
feel a twinge of discomfort each time I read the message and found the
kind words of remembrance juxtaposed with a technical message. But two
more elements stand out in this message, each of them at least as distressing
as the juxtaposition of the condolences with the technicalities.
First, it's hard not to get the impression that the writer
of this message really didn't know Nicole. Altogether he has told her mother
that her daughter was a nice person ("at least appeared to be"!) and that
he enjoyed reading her postings. The only element in the letter that suggests
anything approaching a personal acquaintance is the reference to the fact
that Nicole seemed to put her trust in the horn list when she approached
it with a question, and this, it seems to me, is little more than a truism,
since why else would someone ask the list a question other than to receive
information? If e-mail is supposed to be capable of drawing people together,
of giving them a sense of belonging to a like-minded community, or to a
community of similar interests, that capability isn't reflected in this
letter.
The second element that stands out in this message is
the fifth line of the header, even before the letter itself starts:
CC: "HL" <horn@spock.nlu.edu>
A copy of this letter has been sent not only to Nicole's
family, but to every member of the horn list as well. Though eulogies are
intended to be read in public, I'm not sure that condolence letters are.
The cartoon at the head of this page relates to that subject, but I doubt
that even the person who drew the cartoon was alluding to messages being
sent to an entire list. Though I would think that Nicole's mother would
want others to know good things about her daughter, being told them in
the same "personal" letter that was sent to her doesn't seem to be the
proper way.
(And BTW, the frowning "smiley", though totally acceptable
in e-messages in general, seems distinctly out of place here. We use smilies
as a sort of shorthand, and it's unclear that shorthand is called for in
condolence messages. What's more, we've come to identify smilies with a
certain lighthearted atmosphere which definitely isn't fitting for condolence
messages.)
In the following week an additional twenty e-messages concerning
Nicole's death (and the injury of another young member of the same list
who was riding with her in the car) were posted to the list. Another two
messages were about other subjects but also mentioned Nicole. Altogether
this was about 10% of the mail on the list for that week. Of the additional
twenty messages, five of them were posted to Nicole's family as well as
to the list. I don't know how many private messages were sent to Nicole's
family.
Events such as this capture our involvement quite suddenly
and totally, and then just as quickly fade from the limelight. There's
every reason to expect that the list would return to business as usual
in about a week, and it seems that this is what happened. But some of the
members of the list sought not only some way to express their sorrow and
condolences on the list, but also to memorialize Nicole. One of the ideas
raised was to set up a web page in her memory - a logical and legitimate
suggestion. (Nicole herself had a web
page, and chances are good that with the closing of her account her
page was closed as well. Personally, it would seem to me that a fitting
memorial would be the maintaining of her pages on some other server.) But
this suggestion apparently met with a very lackluster response. On August
3, Thomas Nielsen, of the previously quoted post wrote to the list:
I'm trying to get a page up in Nicole's memory and have asked for
some text (true stories or nice words) or picture contributions, and I've
so far 'only' received 3, and we have here a list that comprises more than
300 subscribers - I'll leave it at that, but I think you know where I'm
going with this.
Nielsen seems to be suggesting that
the list subscribers, ordinarily a very loquacious lot, were surpisingly
apathetic on this sensitive and emotional subject. Personally, I don't
think that the lack of response was a reflection of the apathy of the list
members. Quite the contrary, it seems to me that what happened was that
a few members of the list, perhaps influenced by the popular literature
on the subject, mistakenly thought they were a community rather than a
list. This would explain the very limited response on the part of the list
members to Thomas's request, and the small amount of mail devoted to Nicole.
Members of the list simply hadn't gotten to know Nicole from her correspondance
with the list, and they thus felt that they had very little to tell about
her, or to her family. The only truly personal
and emotionally charged letter to Nicole's family (and to the list)
came not from a list member, but from the mother of a member who wrote
as a mother. It seems that she found more common ground as a mother than
horn players did as horn players.
But although the list apparently didn't
turn into a community following the death of a member, a number of interesting,
perhaps original, methods of mourning were suggested. One member referred
to great departed horn players in his short
message. Another member of the list suggested a memorial that would
be particularly fitting for horn players:
Now I think many of us are feeling a little shock and maybe even
anger at the passing of this friend we cheered on, but never met. Our community
has suffered a loss, and I think we should do something in her memory.
What I was thinking was that maybe those of us who feel inclined could
pick a time such as next Friday evening and each play a piece in her memory
in a favorite or peacefull location. Some good possibilities might be Poulenc's
Elegie (written in response to the tragic death of Dennis Brain in an automobile
accident), or Ravel's Pavane (which is perhaps more widely known) or even
the Tchaik 4 solo... really any piece of horn music of the appropriate
character will do.
I found this suggestion very fitting,
but I was moved even more by a different message. Active mailing lists,
by definition, tend to be terribly loquacious, and it's hard to find a
bit of quiet in them - the sort of quiet that allows you to mourn for a
member of the list. Thus I was most impressed by a message entitled A
moment of silence for Nicole Taylor. About fifteen minutes after this
first "moment of silence" was posted, another showed up on the list. Intrigued,
I did some extensive searching via DejaNews
and Reference Com for other examples
of this practice. Admittedly, searching through newsgroups for a practice
that might be common on listservs may be ill-fated from the start, but
it was my best bet. I didn't find any other examples, and I don't know
whether this practice is prevalent or not. Whether it is or isn't, on the
sad occasions when condolences are called for on listserv mailing lists,
I strongly endorse it.
That's it for this edition. Reactions and suggestions
can be sent to:
Jay Hurvitz
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