Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2022
Abstract
Virtual reality (VR) offers an exciting new way to represent crises of forced migration. Like many new technologies, though, VR risks exacerbating the challenges that exist in more traditional modes of representation, particularly that of documentary film. This essay examines two VR projects that depict migrants attempting to cross borders: Carne y Arena (Virtually Present, Physically Invisible) by Alejandro González Inárritu and We Wait, co-produced by Aardman Studios and the BBC. The two projects differ in technique but share many characteristics as they attempt to encourage empathy in the viewer through the use of immersive technology.
Keywords: virtual reality, documentary, interactivity, immersive technology
Introduction
The plight of migrants has long been a subject of documentary film, as filmmakers try to capture the seemingly endless environmental and political crises that displace large groups of people. The liminal state of forced migration presents many challenges to filmmakers and journalists alike, including the balancing act of representing the losses of the displaced with the danger of objectifying and commodifying that loss. Visual representations of refugees, for example, often depict women and children in vulnerable states, playing on a long established discourse of helplessness and infantilization and eliciting pity or guilt in Western audiences (Chouliaraki, 2006, pp. 89–90). While the goal of representing the displaced is usually to prompt identification and empathy, the result is often to further dehumanize sufferers for the spectator, who is usually presumed to be not only Western but also homogenous in terms of race, class, and gender (Ong, 2014, pp. 189–190). In addition, many documentary projects simplify refugee narratives to the point of suppressing the complex economic and sociopolitical causes of forced migration (Sou, 2018, p. 512).
As immersive, stereoscopic 3D technologies become more accessible to filmmakers and consumers alike, more artists and journalists have attempted to provide an all-encompassing experience, breaking the established codes of visual representation by expanding the sensorium of the viewer. By eliciting a more profound sense of verisimilitude, they hope to sharpen a sense of empathy. The promise of virtual reality (VR) documentary lies in its ability to erase the cinematic frame, hiding the representational interface and providing a sense of bodily presence.
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