craft
There is a lot of "folk art" in Amish country that I think of as akin to simple life porn. Like, look at the cute leetle girl in her bonnet with her fuzzy animal! How quaint that she won't go to school beyond 8th grade! It just feels exploitative.
So, I think of all cultural fixation on things Mennonite and Shaker and whatnot as sort of a pornography of simplicity. But there may be more to it - that there's something in this other culture that appeals to our idea of ourselves as living more shallow, technical lives than we want. And maybe we'd like a little more slowness, a little more craft. To be able to spend months with our family sewing a quilt or something.
Cause as a culture we don't really allow for much craft. There's very little interpretation of our own work (not just our jobs, but all work we do) or others' as the work of craftsfolk. Can you even imagine a culture where table bussers and cashiers and computer programmers were all expected to think of their jobs as a meaningful craft - something they could perfect and control? I think that'd be swell.
So, I think of all cultural fixation on things Mennonite and Shaker and whatnot as sort of a pornography of simplicity. But there may be more to it - that there's something in this other culture that appeals to our idea of ourselves as living more shallow, technical lives than we want. And maybe we'd like a little more slowness, a little more craft. To be able to spend months with our family sewing a quilt or something.
Cause as a culture we don't really allow for much craft. There's very little interpretation of our own work (not just our jobs, but all work we do) or others' as the work of craftsfolk. Can you even imagine a culture where table bussers and cashiers and computer programmers were all expected to think of their jobs as a meaningful craft - something they could perfect and control? I think that'd be swell.
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Sometimes when I explain some of the best moments of my childhood (going out to the henhouse to gather eggs for my breakfast, bailing hay with my cousins, helping my mom with her woodworking) I get this look of "aww, how quaint, country folk!"
I'd give a lot to go back to a more simple life. A lot.
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What a novel idea! Control over your own work!? It's madness.
Can you talk to my boss for me?
/end snark
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I'm not sure how that would work with the first two (I do know some computer programmers who take pleasure in having efficient code) -- I had pretty much perfected both bussing and cashiering by the end of the first week. After that, it's just a lot of dull labor. Trading tasks with the boss after a couple of hours, that would have kept it fresh!
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Google craft blogs and you'll find tons of them- usually by women. They make things and write about the process. They post pics of swaps and post links to other crafters sites. Some of them are artists but many are women working your average, boring job or staying home with their kids. I wondered about it at first because it's so expensive. You can almost always buy something cheaper than to make it yourself. And so many of these women have made small businesses of their work at the same time that they're homeschooling their four kids or working a full-time job or going to school. But if you've ever worked on any crafts yourself, you know it's very much about what you said- making something you can perfect and control and also- it's yours.
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I love craft blogs and DIY bloggers in general (zinesters' websites are often brilliant little zine creations themselves). But all work could be like that with the right structure for it.
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Definitely depends on the type of craft, and the supplies needed. I've seen DIY-ers with a lot of ingenuity who can make things for almost no money, but it does take more time and labor. But if it's soothing, rewarding labor, then it is worthwhile.
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I'm evil, by the way. :)
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