Space for general notes:
Jane Bennett - Powers of the Hoard: Artistry and Agency in a World of Vibrant Matter
Book: Vibrant Matter
Influential theorists- Foucault-
Speculative account of active expressive or calling capacity of things; Hist. Sexuality- trace outlines of strange new productive power that did not operate via refusal; focusing on creative capacity of things;
Heidegger- emphasized incalculability of the thing, and its persistent withdrawal from our attempts to use, present or know it;
Spinoza- every body comes with drive to seek alliances with other bodies that seek to enhance vitalities
Call of things
Metaphysical tradition of west- things as lively, vibrant materialities
Response to a set of specific things- items of trash collected in Baltimore gutter near her home
She felt the call- enchanted by the tableau
Expressing this and exploring through object lesson of the hoarder
“The things just speak out to me” –hoarder
Language as rhetoric—word sounds— tuning human body, rendering it more susceptible to the frequency of material agencies inside and around us; the goal: to use words to make whatever communications already at work between vibrant bodies more audible, detectable, sensible
Human vs thing-agency
Perception of the hoarder- attunement to vibration of things
Continuum of possession
Material agency of things/thing-power
• Slowness-
rate of decay; illusion of permanence; contrast to human bodies and relationships
• Contagion and porosity- from Spinoza
Material entities are subject to change
Porosity- between bodies body hoarded/hoarder bear impression of one another
Integration; not possessions but pieces of self; see Belk’s extended self.
Hoarders have an exceptional awareness
Expression beyond human agency; see micro biomes, elements, metabolized foods, sounds and odors, prosthetic technologies.
Assemblages- ideologies, cultures, etc
Inorganic Sympathy
Hoarders feel the force of” it”- the hoard and the “it stuff” within the hoarder make a connection as act of sympathy
Freud’s “death drive”- body has impulse to return to the indeterminacy of the inorganic
W. Benjamin- rather than use the collection, the connoisseur makes the glorification of things his concern; irrelevance of utility
Hoarders report a high when called by an object (advenience) to be added to the hoard; non-discriminatory nature of objects collected, vs. the connoisseur’s taste.
Benjamin moves from thing-power to human agency too quickly for Bennett
Against material agency
Human conceit- human-centrism
Default grammar
Pragmatic bias
Accessing thing-power
Poetry
Finnegan’s Wake
Hoarding- the call of things is difficult to ignore
Enunciating the non-linguistic expressivity of things
Slowing thing power into human power via words- stickiness
Voluntary poverty- religion- as resistance to allure of material possessions
Archaeology- testament to thing-power; material culture studies- no people can speak; reading through things
ADD- the experience; refigured as preference for punctuated time of lively things of smooth linearity of intention motion
World of paranoia- overextended receptivity to activity of material bodies
Fetish objects- museum curators and art lovers
Web marketer’s sensitivity to the call of web-data or site visits/clicks-
These sites show how non-human power of things help maintain the over consumptive ecologically disastrous society we live in
Not post-human project; in order to understand social practices, we must understand non-human components inside these social practices. Looking for road to sustainable consumption practices.
Q + A
Meditation
Increasing perception- Buddhist monks have commonalities with hoarders-
Differences- monks have a method of cultivating attentiveness; hoarders may have a natural special attentiveness
Looking at minimalists- they are attuned to the call/noise/disruption of things, so they get rid of the things
Looking for places to develop understanding of a hypothesis that things have power