Saturday, 21 June 2014

On the Machinations of Maps and Making

I do think of myself as a maker. I am not, however, special in this regard; all living creatures “make” in some capacity or another.  As I was reminded when researching my papermaking sojourn, the wasp has been producing paper nests for millions of years. (Mann) Humbling as that is, my experiments with various recycled materials have given me a new appreciation for the vast inventory of human learning that is a single sheet of paper.  Along with this awareness comes new understanding of my culture’s arguably dysfunctional romance with the consumption of goods, how wide the chasm gapes between having and making, and how my chosen role as maker can work to bridge the gap. In support of this, I will primarily refer to Ann Thorpe’s Architecture and Design versus Consumerism,  and Dr. Steven Mann’s online video Introduction to Papermaking, unless otherwise noted.
The chasm I speak of is the gulf of time between Ts’ai Lun’s first run with his bamboo screen mold and deckle in 104 CE (Mann), and the more recent few Wednesdays ago when I used mine.  What I did was to simply follow (or not follow) advice posted by experts and novices alike, and to mimic motions played out in YouTube videos. Lun, by comparison, invented production-based papermaking some 2000 years ago, and his insights and technologies have remained largely unchanged to date. (Mann)
To my post-process eyeballs, the absurdity of thousands of years of experience being held in something as lowly and common as a gum wrapper has come into sharp focus. Also, the fact that my knowledge of cellulose as the primary component of paper has been virtually handed to me as a 21st century human without any particular effort on my part, I must now consider the difference between what I know from actual experience, and what I assume to know.
In light of my newfound respect for paper, the amount of material I have thrown out with little regard for its making is personally dismaying. I no longer see paper as a passively inert problem cluttering up my garbage can and recycle bins.  Rather, I see it as a kind of activated enabler, a machine into and upon which I have recorded much of my collective experience, supposition and whimsy, and which I have taken completely for granted.
The online Oxford dictionary’s technical definition of a machine is “any device that transmits a force or directs its application”.   A subtle distinction would be to say that a machine is “any device that is used to transmit a force or to direct its application”.  Paper falls under this definition if you consider force as a “thing regarded as exerting power or influence”, especially when it comes in the form of a book. The Roman scholar Aldus made it his life’s work to distribute more evenly the power and influence controlled by what he called the “book buriers”. (Barolini 30-31)
 Too, if not somewhat obviously, a device is described as “a contrivance or an invention serving a particular purpose”. In this instance paper was contrived as a medium for data storage; not much different in intent from today’s personal computers and iPhones. Granted, I don’t think the average consumer would so casually toss one of today’s must-have devices into the garbage or recycle bin like we do paper, and yet…
Our “dysfunctional romance” with the idea that goods serve as a valuation of personal worth is not unlike our relatively modern approach to “playing the field”, or dating, as a form of recreation. Visible consumption of goods functions as a sign to others of our acceptance of the values of the larger society and our intent to belong to it; dating the most popular guy at school makes one popular by association, and therefore one “belongs” and is also considered desirable, and so on.  “[N]ovelty (stimulation-as-reward) and anxiety (social striving for position or belonging through goods) are two key factors that drive consumerism”. (Thorpe 63) By this logic, if people were iPhones, I would have already dumped versions 1.0 through 4.0 and would be currently enamored with version 5.0; that is until 6.0 comes along. In this regard, we are quite fickle as to how we go about satiating our needs.
I have been aware of the concept of “peer pressure” since my first sex education class in high school. From the educator’s point of view an informed teenager makes better decisions regarding his or her sexual health and is more likely to avoid such pit falls as unwanted pregnancy and disease. This infers that an individual will act in their own best interests, as opposed to following the crowd. Thorpe cites recent studies of social networks that contradict this belief in the consumer. The researchers state that “subconsciously or otherwise, we end up aping what our friends do and this mimicry is in turn passed on to others in the chain, influencing people several degrees of separation removed from ourselves” and go on to describe this as a “contagion of behaviours” noting “undesirable behaviours… can be just as contagious as desirable behaviours” (Thorpe 59) 
 Conversely, we seem to be quite logical and rational in our desire to be perceived as socially valuable; Thorpe discusses economist Peter Victor’s take on the tendency to associate goods and notions of progress:
Over time, society’s focus moved more closely towards economic progress based on market transactions. Not only are market transactions easily quantifiable, but also economists argued that markets are the most efficient way of distributing resources. Markets enable us to convert the “value” or “utility” of a product or service into a monetary price, then money offers a convenient, universal way for people to express their preferences, needs and wants – through consumer purchases (Thorpe 39)
I find it intriguing that we choose to validate our selves via the purchase of cheap commodities, and find it equally frustrating that we resist making significant change in favour of economic efficiencies; we seem to repeatedly privilege the external over the internal. As Thorpe clearly states “the current societal narrative, hung up on individualization – the individuals unwillingness to change or sacrifice – traps us in a no-win situation”. (67)  She does however point to the  “possibility of collective citizen action across large scale movements” as a possible antidote,  and that the forces of “individualization, commoditization and the increasing pace of immediate rewards” can instead “be read as a map of where to target collective action, a map for agency”. (68)
I take her words, and my newly realized role as a map maker of agency, to heart.
Works Cited
Barolini, Helen. Aldus and his Dream Book. New York: Italica. 1992. Print. (Excerpt: 30-31.)
Handout. Emily Carr University of Art and Design. Vancouver, BC. n.d.
Mann, Steven. Introduction to Papermaking – History of Papermaking. Video. July 14, 2012.
Thorpe, Ann. Architecture & Design versus Consumerism – How Design Activism Confronts 
Growth. Handout. Emily Carr University of Art and Design. Vancouver, BC. n.d.
“device.”oxforddictionaries.com. Oxford Dictionaries. Web. June 16, 2014
“force.”oxforddictionaries.com. Oxford Dictionaries. Web. June 16, 2014

“machine.”oxforddictionaries.com. Oxford Dictionaries. Web. June 16, 2014

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