Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Speaking of Hoarders....NYTimes reports: Stuffed!

To follow up on Jean's post about the show Hoarders:

Rob Walker wrote about the new reality show, and the mental disorder of hoarding stuff, in this past Sunday's New York Times Magazine's Consumed section. Two choice paragraphs:

It’s interesting then that “Hoarders” has found its audience now. In a sense, the show can be read as a metaphor for an entire culture that has lost perspective on the relative importance of things and desperately needs help. Steketee says the disorder is “an age-old problem” but adds, “I do think our consumer culture has probably made it considerably worse.” Then again, it could be read as perversely reassuring, inserting distance between the rest of us and a handful of out-of-control freaks.

Sharenow, however, insists that the show’s subjects are “relatable.” Imagine if strangers tossed your irreplaceable family mementos in a garbage truck; now imagine you had the same attachment to every single object you possess, right down to candy wrappers and crumpled receipts. That is, most everybody’s identity is partly tied up in, or reflected by, their things — and plenty of us have moments of anxiety about that, perhaps in the last year especially. It’s certainly true that after I watch the show, I cast a wary eye on the deposits of object clutter here and there in my home. The scariest reading of “Hoarders” is that these freakish piles of stuff it documents simply reflect what plenty of us consume as a matter of course; our ability to dispose of the evidence properly is what makes us normal. “The line between the people on our show, who have very severe cases of the disorder, and, you know, most of the population,” Sharenow says, “is kind of thin.”


And here's the entire article! Read on!

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/20/magazine/20FOB-consumed-t.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=hoarders&st=cse


Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Hoarding

I'm living in a hotel room for this next week and therefore have a TV!!!! very exciting!!!... anyway, I came across a show called 'Hoarders' on A&E which was pretty enlightening and pretty relevant to Excess!

According to Wikipedia Compulsive Hoarding "is the acquisition of and failure to use or discard such a large number of seemingly useless possessions that it causes significant clutter and impairment to basic living activities such as mobility, cooking, cleaning, showering or sleeping.".. .. showering?? sleeping!?!?!?!?!? ack!!

Here is a picture of hoarding I found online at www.anxietyandstress.com/hoarding.html:

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I found this fascinating for a few reasons:
the hoarders on this show seemed to know that what they were doing was detrimental to them and those around them, but just really didn't know how to stop...
there are probably many people who have not let their hoarding get so out hand, but are also close to the edge- my dad used to keep a lot of useless things and I have this distinct memory of the family helping him throw things away once a year..
I also relate to hoarding!! I find myself battling with throwing things away that I don't have any use for... part of it is the want of stuff and part of it is hating to feel like something is going to a landfill (and maybe a little genetics??)... I wonder if I could ever get out of hand like the people in the A&E show?!?!?! am I a closet hoarder?!?!?!?!

Monday, December 14, 2009

For the Love Of...Marriage Equality!

This profile was in the NY Times Weddings Section last Sunday, Dec 6th. I loved the story, and just wanted to share; also, The Anthropologists are planning to connect with an organization that supports marriage equality during the performance run of Constellation: For the Love Of... and donate part of our ticket sales to the cause. Love for all!

Read on about the marriage of Stephen Davis and Jeffrey Busch...

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Cargo Cults: The Worship of Objects

I came across this interesting and somewhat disturbing interview with monologuist Mike Daisey in last week's TimeOut New York. Here's the link to the whole article:
http://newyork.timeout.com/articles/theater/81093/mike-daisey-qa#ixzz0ZJiXBqTs

In it, he discusses his new piece,
The Last Cargo Cult. I'd never heard of a cargo cult, and was shocked to find out what it is:


What exactly is a cargo cult?
During World War II, the United States set up military bases on islands far away from the conflict. That meant that some islands that had very little contact with the outside world abruptly had airfields and U.S. airmen on them and chocolate and cigarettes and refrigerators and radios and all this magical awesome shit. When the Americans left, religions sprang up that worshipped America—or, more specifically, the objects of America. What they want is cargo, which we often infantilize as, like, iPods and tissue paper and jewelry. But cargo is medicine and guns and knives: It’s tools. They want power. And they want that power explicitly to preserve their way of life.

Can you imagine?! An entire religion centered around the obsession with material objects?! And how fascinating that the possession of these objects in turn symbolizes power for these isolated islanders. Daisy goes on to talk about the parallel with this seemingly absurd belief system
and "what I believe is the overwhelmingly dominant religion of the first world, which is the financial system—a belief system that relies on trust and faith and sympathetic magic." Our belief in the financial system and desire for wealth in turn leads to the buying of, and perhaps obsession with, material objects. So in actuality, while it may seem crazy to create an entire religion around cargo, how far removed are we Americans from the things we worship ourselves?

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Photoshop! and how it affects our view on the body

I love the multimedia pieces that the NYTimes does and so happened upon this piece the other week.. A piece on photoshop and the idea that there should be some recognition that most (all?) photographs in magazines and ads and such have been worked on:

http://video.nytimes.com/video/2009/03/09/opinion/1194838469575/op-ed-sex-lies-and-photoshop.html?nl=&emc=urb3

I thought it was a great compliment to what we had been talking about at the Corpus rehearsal the other night..

I also liked this piece because, while this is a topic I'm familiar with, I was surprised at some of the information it provided and also really appreciated hearing what the re-touchers themselves had to say (both about their job and the role of retouching is society). ... I also liked the idea that if we can be able to see these photographs as art instead of depicting true life we might be able to change our perspective on beauty (and change our self esteem??) ... maybe?? :) ...

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Body & Perspective

Just a quick post to touch on the work of Ron Mueck, a fascinating sculptor.  I saw his exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum a few years back and it was a wild and eye-opening experience.  His sculptures are incredibly life-like.  Even that description does it no justice - you would swear these pieces are breathing when you look at them.  One thing I like about his work in particular is his use of perspective.  Sometimes the size is larger than life, other times 2/3 scale and also miniature, but always incredibly and biologically detailed. 

There are some good pics on the Brooklyn Museum site.