In
the beginning of Jane Bennet’s description of “thing power” she poetically begins with a list of
seemingly commonplace objects.
One
large men’s plastic work glove
One
dense mat of oak pollen
One
unblemished dead rat
One
white plastic bottle cap
One
smooth stick of wood
Bennet
notices these objects upon chance, when sunlight is reflected upon the surface
of the workman’s glove, delineating the “thing” from its seemingly mundane
environment. Her eye is then attracted to this peculiar grouping of things that
seem to revert back and forth between simple forms of debris and the remnants
of human activity. Undoubtedly, their classification as “debris” is simply a
product of the surrounding environment, a gritty storm drain, but there is a
higher potential to these things, which is continuously ignored by the
passerby. These things persist as forms of nature by rotting and decaying,
exuding energy and odor and chemical byproducts into the air. Therefore, the
things that we often ignore as waste and debris ultimately enclose a potential
force to affect our health, behavior, ideals etc. Over the years, the arts and
sciences have taken two different approaches to investigating the agency of
things over human life. In the arts, a conglomeration of things can inspire us
to think of our personal or cultural relationship with the seemingly inanimate.
In the sciences, papers are published that force us to consider how we use
things or how we waste them. These different approaches force us to regard
things as something more than simply the inanimate.
Bennet’s
odd assemblage of things reminded me of the work of Abraham Cruzvillegas, a
Mexican sculptor renowned for his use of everyday objects to create visually
stimulating installations. Cruzvillegas creates these installations based on
the principle of “Autoconstrucción.” Autoconstrucción in Mexican culture refers
to the construction of houses made by low-income families who often settle
illegally in abandoned territories and build makeshift dwellings from found
objects. In turn, these dwellings are constantly begin added to or changed by
their inhabitants. Accordingly, Cruzvillegas uses objects that he finds in
communities all around the world to reflect the common cultural of those places.
However, these sculptures are haphazardly created to form asymmetrical and
unstable structures, which leaves the viewer to openly interpret the
piece. In describing his work
Cruzvillegas stated, “I wanted to join specific practices from contradictory contexts
in order to make an unstable sculpture, both physically and conceptually, as it
could be interpreted or watched as a result from a mixture of subjective
experiences.” (Art 21, 2001) Cruzvillegas
touches on the universal human desire to relate the aesthetics of things to
their own personal history, especially when looking at art. In addition, the
artist manipulates these things in such a way that they lose their original
purpose or identity and become transformed into an entirely new concept.
Another
body of work that rectified the “thing” were the readymades of Marcel Duchamp.
Beginning in the early 1900s, Duchamp began to challenge the idea of “retinal
art” or art made only to please the eyes, by extrapolating things from their
original environment and putting them in a museum setting. One of Duchamp’s
first readymades “Bicycle Wheel” was one of the first kinetic sculptures,
creating a kind of non functional machine. The bicycle wheel is mounted on a
stool as if it is meant to be the focus of attention, and reflects a sense of
motion and energy associated with machinery. Duchamp once stated, “All in all,
the creative act is not performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the
work in contact with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its
inner qualification and thus adds his contribution to the creative act. This
becomes even more obvious when posterity gives a final verdict and sometimes
rehabilitates forgotten artists.”DuChamp, Marcel. ”The Creative Act”. 1957. Here, Duchamp modestly submits his
work to the public’s interpretation. The viewer’s acknowledgment of the ‘inner
qualification’ of the work is ultimately out of Duchamp’s control, and what
determines this qualification is the unique interaction that each person has
with the thing or the assemblage of things. Duchamp’s ultimate goal was to
revolutionize the definition of art itself by exploiting the power of the
ordinary “thing.” Seeing an everyday thing stripped of its use value and put
into a different setting invokes a sense of confusion in the viewer. This
confusion stems from our desire to place all the non-human entities into
categories. For example, animals and things are defined by us as the “other”
but only under certain conditions. When they are removed from their usual
environments and placed into new ones, we are forced to come up with new explanations
for their unfamiliar existence.
From
a more scientific perspective, things in our current technological age such as
food, electronics, and general consumer have a continuous power over our
behavior and lifestyle. Advertising is specifically targeted to reflect our
unique evolutionary biology as humans thus influencing our desire for consumer
goods. Between males and females, certain aspects of our evolved psyche are
triggered by advertisements to make one believe that they “need” the product.
For instance, throughout the evolutionary history of animals and humans, hormonally
induced competition among males is crucial in establishing dominant status and
consequentially improving their reproductive success by attracting members of
the opposite sex. In accordance,
testosterone is theorized to also affect male consumer behavior and financial
risk taking because the accumulation of finance is considered a characteristic
of high status and male dominance in the modern age. Studies that support this
theory show that men’s testosterone levels increase when participating in the
finance markets or when buying a luxury item. The advertising industry can utilize
this theorized trait in males to associate their products with high status and
increased attractiveness to females. For example, the 2012 Fiat scorpion
commercial features a man looking at an attractive woman and leans in to kiss
her, when suddenly he realizes that it is actually a car. This kind of
juxtaposition between the advertised thing and sexual reward is thus common in
advertisements for many different products and can be targeted at both men and
women based on our generalized desires.
Bennet
also discusses the relationship between things and human biology in her chapter
“stem cells and the culture of life.” In this chapter, the concept of vitalism
is discussed, which is to stay that non living entities are distinct from
living organisms because the living contain the “spark of life” or in other
words, a soul. The theory of vitalism, although rejected by mainstream science,
is essentially still used by some politicians and scientists to establish the
moral boundaries of scientific experimentation. On the other hand some other
vitalists believe that the study of the non-living will ultimately uncover the
ontology of the living. To quote the German biologist and philosopher Hans
Driesch:
There
is the material world as the world of chance, but there is also a world of
form or order that manifests itself in certain areas of the material world, namely,
in the biological individual, and probably, in another way, in phylogeny and
history also; there may be formlike constellations in what we call the organic.
form or order that manifests itself in certain areas of the material world, namely,
in the biological individual, and probably, in another way, in phylogeny and
history also; there may be formlike constellations in what we call the organic.
(Vibrant
Matter, 83)
I
personally agree with this form of vitalism, because I am very interested in
the used of model organisms to uncover certain aspects of human biology. Driesch
himself experimented with sea urchin development and discovered that sea urchin
embryos can display indeterminate cell cleavage, similar to the development of
twins in human embryology. Moreover, a shared evolutionary history allows us to
examine conserved genetic, metabolic, and disease pathways in a variety of
different animals and even microscopic organisms. For instance, our genetic
material can be inserted into E. coli bacteria and expressed in their genome to
reveal the specific functions of our genes and how they are regulated.
Therefore, because all the matter that currently exists on this earth arose from
the same evolutionary origin, it is logical that the study of animals and of
things would relate to our own biological development. If we were to place
ourselves in a higher order, perhaps as closer to god than any other being on
planet, than the study of biology would be lacking in essential information.
I
was also very interested in Bennet’s chapter on “Edible Matter” and looking at
what we eat as having control over our mood and lifestyle. The problem of
obesity in America undoubtedly displays the agency of food and nutrition on
human life. Fast food although affordable and easily accessible is also highly
addictive due to the increased content of salts, sugars, and fats. Certain
studies using rats have actually demonstrated that when their calorie intake
was doubled, reward systems in their brains were manipulated so that increased
food consumption was needed to satisfy their daily appetite (Time Magazine,
“Can Eating Junk Food Really be an Addiction?”). This same kind of
manipulation, caused by inhibited neurotransmitter uptake is also seen in drug
and alcohol addition.
Therefore,
often people who become addicted to fast food lose agency over what they eat
and how they eat. Eating becomes a kind of unconscious activity, and one
disassociates with the evolutionary purpose of eating, which is to provide
energy. Over the course of our evolutionary history, food became more readily
available from the development of agriculture to the mass production of food in
factories. These changes in the production of food prompted the risk of not
only over-eating, but also eating unhealthy or synthetic foods. As a
consequence, the need to survive and be healthy became less of a driving force
and we have evolved to do things that we know will negatively affect our
health.
In
David Sloan Wilson’s book “Evolution for Everyone” the author compares our
desire for fast food to a misguided evolutionary instinct, “Our lust for fat,
sugar, and salt makes great sense in an environment where these substances were
in perennial short supply, but putting a fast food restaurant on every corner
is like lighting up the sky for inland baby sea turtles.” (Evolution for
Everyone, 55) The reference to baby sea turtles alludes to the behavior of
these animals to be drawn to the sea by moonlight after hatching. However, the
unnatural lighting of coastal neighborhoods have caused them to become lost
inland. Humans on the other hand, know that there is a problem with the way
they consume, but we are simply unable to solve it even with our willpower and
higher intelligence. In this sense, our rational mind cannot control the agency
that non-living fat, sugar, and salt has over our body. I am not trying to say
that I do not experience these unconscious cravings myself, I too have
frequently experienced the desire to overeat not necessarily because I am
hungry but because I am stressed out, unhappy, or just because I feel unable to
stop.
In
conclusion, my personal relationship with non-living things is principally
influenced by the arts and sciences. I was introduced to modern art at a very
young age because my mother is an art collector and curator. In my house there
are a lot of things that are considered art but could also be ordinary things
in a different setting. For example, we have a pair of children’s leather shoes
in my living room, which sit on a pedestal. For a while I questioned the
artistic value of the shoes but by reading about the agency of things in this
class, it has become clearer to me. Sometimes the artist has no major role in
how one will interpret their work, and it is really up to the viewer to
disregard their own notions of what art is and simply look at the thing as
having its own identity and history. As my interests in the sciences started to
develop, I also started looking at the thing has having energy and force over
human life. I started to look at the relationship between humans and things
through an evolutionary lens, and recognized that things do in fact have agency
over our every day lives. Therefore, while many people may disagree with me, I
think that it is important to keep studying animals and non living things to
further our knowledge human diseases and behaviors. If we keep ignoring the
agency of things, our environment and health will deteriorate by blind
consumption and waste. Thus, it is up to people to recognize the power of even
the unnoticeable things, that they might pass by everyday. With that in mind, I
will end with my own list of seemingly commonplace objects that I encountered
on the sidewalk while walking home:
One
broken pencil
One
adidas sneaker
One
empty beer can
One
crushed potato chip
One
dead radio
An interesting interview with Abraham Cruzvillegas:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZ5Ca9PlgSw
An interesting interview with Abraham Cruzvillegas:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZ5Ca9PlgSw
http://themindunleashed.org/2014/01/scientists-found-memories-may-passed-generations-dna.html
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