A lifelong packrat, here’s the story of my unlikely conversion to minimalism.
Concert tickets. Refrigerator magnets. Christmas ornaments. Comic books. Trading cards. Greeting cards. Bobbleheads. Bank statements. Photo albums. Vinyl records. Shoes. Shot glasses. Jewelry. Blu-rays.
What does the stuff we collect, consciously or unconsciously, contribute to the story of our lives?
And… what does it mean for us when there’s less of it?
In an opinion piece that appeared in the New York Times earlier this month, columnist Peter Funt laments the obsolescence of analog mementoes in a Digital Age:
And so ticket stubs join theater playbills, picture postcards, handwritten letters and framed photos as fading forms of preserving our memories. It raises the question, Is our view of the past, of our own personal history, somehow different without hard copies?
Peter Funt, “Does Anyone Collect Old Emails?,” Opinion, New York Times, April 5, 2019
In recent years, I’ve expanded this blog from its initial scope, an exclusively academic forum on storytelling craft, to chronicle my own personal history, often in no particular order. I am ever and always in search of a clearer, more complete, more honest perspective on my past, and how it has shaped the narrative arc of my life; I mine my memories regularly for content, and for truth.
I have also routinely expressed apprehension about the practices we’ve lost in a Digital Age, the kind to which Mr. Funt refers, particularly as that applies to the corrupted discipline of storytelling itself: From the superhero crossovers of the “Arrowverse,” to the literary Easter-egg hunt of Castle Rock, to the expansive franchising of Star Wars, today’s popular entertainments are less concerned with saying something meaningful about the human condition than they are with challenging the viewer to catch all their internal cross-references. Whereas stories once rewarded audiences with insight, now the reward is the esteemed privilege of calling oneself a superfan—a participatory designation earned by following all the breadcrumbs and connecting all the dots… an assignment only achievable if one never misses a new installment:
In a nod to the subscription model of consumption—where we lease cars or pay monthly to a music service—the extended narratives of prestige TV series spread out their climaxes over several years rather than building to a single, motion picture explosion at the end. But this means energizing the audience and online fan base with puzzles and “spoilers”. . . .
. . . The superfan of commercial entertainment gets rewarded for going to all the associated websites and fan forums, and reading all the official novels. Superfans know all the answers because they have purchased all the products in the franchise. Like one of those card games where you keep buying new, expensive packs in order to assemble a powerful team of monsters, all it takes to master a TV show is work and money.
Douglas Rushkoff, Team Human (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2019), 163
Fanboys and -girls thought they were legitimized when the geek subculture went mainstream—when superheroes and sci-fi went from niche hobby to pop-cultural monopoly—but they were really just commodified: “geek” shifted from a stigmatized social category to a lucrative economic one. Leveraging our telecommunications-induced FOMO, a new permutation of commercial narrative was contrived: the “mega-franchise,” which seeks not our intermittent audience, but rather our habitual obedience. Sure, you may not have even liked the last four Star Wars or Terminator or Transformers movies… but do you really wanna run the risk of skipping this one?
So, given those two ongoing preoccupations—personal history and receding traditions in the Digital Age—the thesis of “Does Anyone Collect Old Emails?” would’ve spoken to me regardless, but the timing of it was nonetheless uncanny, as I have devoted no small degree of consideration in recent months to the matter of the physical objects we amass, wittingly or otherwise, and how they tether us to the past. Here’s the story.
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