I once had a friend who liked to participate in the auctions held from time to time in our hometown of objects found in railway carriages. He enjoyed the exercise very much and was always full of stories about the scarcely believable things that people would forget on board - oil paintings, large farming implements, furniture, complete dinner sets. I suspected some of these finds to be apocryphal, and none more so than the urn with the ashes of an unknown deceased, if for no other reason that I couldn't believe the authorities would put that particular item up for auction. Ditto the inflatable sex doll. However, over the years I received some independent verification that a) this auction actually exists, although it is held in a very out of the way location and you have to know somebody who knows somebody since it isn't advertised anywhere, and b) people do in fact lose the most bizarre things on trains. (Including, yes, dead relatives).
According to this forum of railway enthusiasts, Milan is the only Italian city where such objects are sold; elsewhere they are donated to charity. Imagine then the surprise of the drug rehab centre that earlier this year received a backpack found to contain 64 dynamite sticks weighing 12 kilograms in total. It later transpired that the backpack had spent up to two years in the lost luggage office of the in Genoa railway station, and the police is still working on figuring out how it came to be lost, and by whom. But of course in stations and airports elsewhere, most loudly and proudly in the US, you are reminded that if you so much as leave your luggage unattended for a few minutes, it will be seized and destroyed. It is best to beware of contents unknown.
There may be some deeper cultural undercurrent here than the straightforward fear that something may have been abandoned with malicious intent. When people come to be separated from their stuff, it is an alienation of sorts - a very literal one, in terms of the word's etymology, as well as the inverse of the Marxian sense, that inscribes alienation in capitalist relations and notions of property. In the cultures that establish a strong correlation between who you are and what you own, the idea of things being lost is psychologically disruptive, regardless of the raw material value of the thing lost.
The act of losing money - either because of theft, or a stock or property market misadventure, or the loss of one's job - is pertinent but requires separate treatment. The wonderfully worded notion of one's 'personal net worth', that naturally originated in the United States, can be brought to bear here, but money isn't stuff. It exists on a much more abstract plane, changes in value as a result of its own special dynamics, and the nature and psychology of its ownership are quite unique. One can of course think of examples of how money can be turned back into stuff, such as this exchange in Buster Keaton's Sherlock Holmes Jr:
"I lost a dollar"Or the classic image of Uncle Scrooge swimming in his money.
"Can you describe it?"
Or again the tradition of the lucky penny. But for most intents and purposes, and even as it allows to acquire things, or buy some more life in the bizarre lease arrangement that governs human existence and subsistence in capitalist societies, money is an abstraction, a number, not a thing, and certainly not something you'd ever be so crass as to display in the museum of you, or that can be lost irreplaceably - any amount of money of equal or greater denomination will do.
If I may be allowed a little autobiographical moment, I have in fact lost an item that nicely illustrates the difference between semiotic and material value, insofar as this difference can be said to exist. It seems that some time during my fourth year on this planet I taught myself to read and write, something that my parents only became aware of one night when I left a note on the dinner table and made it with a scowl for the door of our apartment. The note said
SONO SUTUFO DI QUESTE INGUSTIZE
VADO DAL MEDICO
NON SO SI TORNO
GIOVANI
Which, minus the typos, translates as follows
I AM TIRED OF THESE INJUSTICES
I'M GOING TO THE DOCTOR'S
I DON'T KNOW IF I'LL EVER RETURN
GIOVANNI
As it happens, it was dark in the landing outside and I ventured no further. In typical fashion, however, my mother took the fact that I wanted to leave the family entirely in her stride, and opted to celebrate instead my cognitive prowess. She therefore tucked the note in her handbag and proceeded to show it to all and sundry. In fact, if you resided anywhere in the Northern Emisphere during the Nineteen-Seventies, I'd say you've probably seen it. Then we lost sight of it for, oh, fifteen years or so, until I found it amongst some junk in a drawer and possibly even chastised my mother for being so careless with it (you can see where this is going), then took over the curatorship of the precious childhood artefact. And I can tell you exactly how I lost it: I put it inside a tacky but fond copy of the works of Edgar Allan Poe, and in the flurry of activities that preceded our emigration to New Zealand the book must have ended up in the wrong box, because it never reached us down here.
I am genuinely sorry about that, and seeing as mum and I remember the note's contents word for word, hence there is no loss in that regard (although a bibliographer might beg to differ), the reason must be that I see intrinsic value in the object itself, some sort of material validation of my having been a precocious pain in the arse. The metaphor of the museum is a good test here, for I have no doubt that I would have included it in my personal exhibit. But it wasn't to be.
If the book ended up in the wrong box, it would have made its way to a second-hand bookshop, so chances are somebody eventually came into its possession. I wonder what they made of it, if they chucked it away or kept it as a curio, perhaps to be used as a bookmark for the flamboyantly bound works of that man from Baltimore. I'm thinking probably the former. But as it happens, that note is exactly the kind of thing that would have tickled the fancy and curiosity of the readers of Found Magazine, seeing that it is not too dissimilar for instance from this entry on Found, the work of an unknown primary school child in Brooklyn:
Creators Davy Rothbart and Jason Bitner explain that at the magazine they
collect found stuff: love letters, birthday cards, kids' homework, to-do lists, ticket stubs, poetry on napkins, doodles-- anything that gives a glimpse into someone else's life. Anything goes.I shall freely confess to finding the magazine itself exquisitely boring, but it's quite the phenomenon, with books and tours (featuring songs inspired by the finds), a dirty section, international beachheads and a lively community. By all accounts its creators are smart people who are quite aware of participating in a culture that, in the words of Eric Karjala,
insists that certain things be popular, and it doesn’t necessarily matter what: a hideous dancing baby, the senseless engrish from an obscure video game, a random 1980s pop hit by Rick Astley. We are so desperate for commonality that any random cultural artefact can become a shared experience, and this is especially true on the internet, which is viral not just in nature but in consequence, making us nauseated from the absurdity.The little spice that Found adds to the mixture is that its artefacts are collected around, in the incongruously named Real World, and dematerialised, beamed into cyberspace to provide momentary occasions of reflection and contribute a whole new source of material to the ever expanding uber-text that so many of us read every day looking for meaningful signs. As if the information already there wasn't enough, and these 'glimpses into someone else's life' contained special kernels of truth, otherwise missing pieces of whatever puzzle it is that the culture is trying to solve by means of the Internet.
Or maybe people read Found because it's innocent fun. Either way, it leaves me fairly cold: there is so much more in the world that gets meaningfully lost, instead of just being crumpled and discarded, as most of Found's finds are, indicating that perhaps they had ceased to be significant to the owners themselves. If I have to go looking for glimpses, I'll browse the lists of items recovered by the Carabinieri, or by the city of Turin, the two largest online repositories back home, and there, hidden amongst hundreds of cellphones and personal organisers and umbrellas and sunglasses, discover candelabras, exquisite antique jewellery, a vest pocket watch inscribed 'from your friends', magnificent old coats, but also - and overwhelmingly - items of little or no value, that yet some officer has bothered to archive and describe, often in painstaking detail, just in case they might have, for their owners, a meaning that they themselves can't see.
There is much there to fantasise about the personal histories, and the connections lost, but also something to commend in that idea of service, the effort spent with very little statistical chance of reuniting anybody with anything.
In that spirit, did you happen to lose this in Cusano Milanino some time in 2004?
I know whom you can call about that.
I liked collecting found objet, even if it is obviously discarded stuff. But I've also got four passport photos (fluttering down to a footpath near you), and a declaration that some girl is some other girl's best friend forever.
ReplyDeleteMy favourite found object was given to me by my fourth form Social Studies teacher. It was a note he found on the side of the road and it's haunted and fascinated me for most of my life since then. I call it the Pink Paper and I reproduce its words here:
ReplyDeleteTranscription of the `Pink Paper’
1 changed will to
make P.R. beneficicary [sic] & Exeuotor [sic]
as directed
2 Signed over car to her
3 AKnowledged [sic] that Dan is my
son.
4 Lifted caveatt [sic] (Temp)
5. Cant [sic] get signed back so
can sgn [sic] over to dan
P.R doesn’t need it its not
going (no. Brake) Flat tyre.
getting nothing but abuse [double lined] from
Her. Not a civil word.
Really being pushed to limit
anything, she says is very
bilng [sic] at and about me.
PTO
will give one more go
If the pills don’t work
wot [sic] next
Suspect the unepected [sic]
from the outside iffluence [sic]
is promoting this so out
of character for P.R.
It tells a story (and not a pretty one) and I've always thought it would make the beginning of a great story where, whilst trying to find out what it means some greater secret is revealed. I've not (yet) written such a tale, but I'd like to think I will.
The thing that gets me about the note is the paper it is written on, which is a pink piece of Minnie Mouse stationary, which just makes it all the more intriguing.
Oh gods, if I say I lost it can I have it? It's gorgeous. (Also scarabs have slightly dodgy personal significance for me. One's safe word should be something unusual and distinctive-sounding.)
ReplyDeleteYou would have liked the Dimitri Martin skit entitled "BDSM couple whose safe word is the correct pronunciation of gnocchi," then.
ReplyDeleteThe Pink Paper is quite a sad find, HORansome, the ones on Found Magazine tend to be less suggestive, certainly less interesting. And I know it's not naming names, but I think I'd find my being in possession of it somehow intrusive. Not that I'm casting aspersions or anything, but some stories are not ours to tell.
I have all The Head paintings in my bedroom, it is The Found Mausoleum Of Me, impenetrable to others.
ReplyDeleteMy husband has a bedroom full of possessions in his family home. Because he hasn't lived there for many years the items represent a time that is a mystery to me and there is nothing I love more than considering these objects and squirrelling away books, cds, photos, shirts to secretly bring back to New Zealand and remind me of who he was before I knew him.
ReplyDeleteThat is so cool, that is Love.
ReplyDeleteMy husband has a bedroom full of possessions in his family home.
ReplyDeleteJustine didn't have a lot of belongings that still dated back to her NZ life when I met her in Europe, so I think I had a similar experience to yours when she showed me her things in the family home. The sense of being so removed from that life of hers was heightened there by the fact that those things not only belonged to the past, but also to a time when I had the vaguest of ideas of where New Zealand even was.
Giovanni, yes, I think there is more to be said on this subject. That is, trying to imagine the past, to construct memories, in a relationship that crosses cultures. Along these lines there is quite a lovely episode that Adam Gopnik writes about when he was raising his small son in Paris and tried to induct him into American culture by telling him an ongoing bedtime story about a baseball player, it was only later that he realised his son had confused the somewhat fundamental elements of pitching and batting.
ReplyDeleteThe bit I didn't mention earlier is that there is always an argument if my husband finds any of these items among our possessions in NZ, he gets grumpy that I would waste precious luggage space on objects that are meaningless paraphernalia.
We tend to smuggle the odd item across every time we go, mum is quite keen for us to do so and that includes some objects that were never mine - like the beautiful chess set that my father taught me the game on. I resist taking those, it seems premature even though it's not as if they're any use for her.
ReplyDeleteBut now with the kids there is some extra incentive. Old comic books and toys are being put back to their original use, which is very pleasing.
(Oh, and Emma: if you wish to claim the scarab, it really would help if you had filled out an item lost/stolen for it back then. Otherwise a precise description - shouldn't be hard - and the circumstances in which you lost it might do.)
The found scarab cannot be given away...
ReplyDeleteThree correspondences
ReplyDelete1.
The letters she wrote me
I stored with devotion,
inside a drawer that was
dense with keepsakes.
Though her stories took up
the whole of that space,
when exposed to the light
the sun shone through.
Her handwriting changed
as she shifted continents.
Whatever I wrote her
got lost in the moving.
2.
He didn't love me,
this I knew early,
yet still I wrote letters
I composed coming home.
They were too long, too detailed,
and ripe-sentimental,
though of what they were made
I wholly forget.
He read them and biffed them,
this he said often,
though his then-future wife
later pored over traces.
3.
The night you moved in, you gave me your school reports to read, as if to say this was the best and worst of you.
We've never been apart long enough to write, so I keep your choicer text messages in the saved folder on my phone.
I love you in words and pictures: that bright-eyed child who grew up to send me images of a hat you wore at a party; the photos of the dogs; the photos of our fridge.
HB, I've already voiced my appreciation for this particularly worthy effort on your blog, but might as well belabour the point here. Just lovely. I shall also confess to finding Justine's old reports and schoolwork very endearing indeed.
ReplyDelete