I often watch the television show âHoarders.â One of my favorite episodes features the pack rats Patty and Debra. Patty is a typical trash-and-filth hoarder: her bathroom contains horrors Iâd rather not describe, and her story follows the showâs typical arc of reform and redemption. But Debra, who hoards clothes, home decorations, and tchotchkes, is more unusual. She doesnât believe that she has a problem; in fact, sheâs completely unimpressed by the producersâ efforts to fix her house. âItâs just not my color, white,â she says, walking through her newly de-hoarded rooms. âEverything that I really loved in my house is gone.â She is unrepentant, concluding, âThis is horribleâI hate it!â Debra just loves to hoard, and people who want her to stop donât get it.
I was never sure why Debraâs stubbornness fascinated me until I came across the work of Jane Bennett, a philosopher and political theorist at Johns Hopkins. A few years ago, while delivering a lecture, Bennett played clips from âHoarders,â commenting on them in detail. She is sympathetic to people like Debra, partly because, like the hoarders themselves, she is focussed on the hoard. She has philosophical questions about it. Why are these objects so alluring? What are they âtryingâ to do? We tend to think of the showâs hoards as inert, attributing blame, influence, and the possibility of redemption to the human beings who create them. But what if the hoard, as Bennett asked in her lecture, has more agency than that? What if these piles of junk exert some power of their own?
This past fall, I met Bennett at a coffee shop near the Johns Hopkins campus. Sixty-five, with coiffed silver hair and catâs-eye glasses, she sat at a table near the window reading the Zhuangzi, one of the two most important texts of Taoism, the Chinese school of thought that emphasizes living in harmony with the world. âThe coffee isnât very good here, but the people are nice,â she told me, conspiratorially. She took out her phone. âI have to show you a picture.â She turned the screen toward me, revealing a photo of two dead rats lying on the pavementâan image at odds with her kindly-neighbor looks. âI was walking by the university, and this is what I found,â she said. I leaned closer. The rats, who had drowned in a rainstorm, lay in artful counterpoint, as though posing for a still-life.
Dead rats are almost a theme in Bennettâs work. In her best-known book, âVibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things,â from 2010, she lists some of the objects that she found on a June morning in front of Samâs Bagels, on Cold Spring Lane, in Baltimore:
One large menâs black plastic work glove One dense mat of oak pollen One unblemished dead rat One white plastic bottle cap One smooth stick of wood
These objects affected her. âI was struck by what Stephen Jay Gould called the âexcruciating complexity and intractabilityâ of nonhuman bodies,â Bennett writes. âBut, in being struck, I realized that the capacity of these bodies was not restricted to a passive âintractabilityâ but also included the ability to make things happen, to produce effects.â Bennett likes to reference Walt Whitman, who once described people who are highly affected by the world around them as having âsensitive cuticles.â Bennett hopes to cultivate a sensitivity in her cuticles. That means paying a lot of attention to everythingâespecially to experiences that might otherwise go unnoticed, uninterrogated.
The idea that objects have agency might be familiar from childhood. When weâre small, we feel connected to a blanket that canât be thrown away, or to a stuffed animal thatâs become a friend. As adults, we may own a precious item of threadbare clothing that we refuse to replaceâyet we wouldnât think of that shirt as having agency in the world. It seems pretty obvious to us that objects arenât actors with their own agendas. When Alvin, another Hoarder, says that âthings speak outâ to him, we know that he has a problem.
Bennett takes Alvinâs side. âThe experience of being hailed by âinanimateâ matterâby objects beautiful or odd, by a refrain, by a piece of cake, or a buzz from your phoneâis widespread,â she writes. âEveryone is in a complicated relationship with things.â In her view, we are often pushed around, one way or another, by the stuff we come into contact with on any given day. A piece of shiny plastic on the street pulls your eye toward it, turning your body in a different directionâwhich might make you trip over your own foot and then smash your head on the concrete, in a series of events thatâs the very last thing you planned or intended. Who has âactedâ in such a scenario? You have, of course. Human beings have agency. But, in her telling, the piece of plastic acted, too. It made something happen to you.
The idea that a piece of plastic has genuine agency places Bennett in an intellectual tradition that originated with the late French philosopher and sociologist Bruno Latour. âWhen we claim that there is, on one side, a natural world and, on the other, a human world, we are simply proposing to say, after the fact, that an arbitrary portion of the actors will be stripped of all action and that another portion, equally arbitrary, will be endowed with souls,â Latour wrote, in âFacing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climate Regime.â Latour thought that we needed to stop arbitrarily restricting agency to the human sphere; by extending our sense of who and what may act, he argued, we might more easily acknowledge obvious facts about our world. âA force of nature is obviously just the opposite of an inert actor,â Latour wrote. âEvery novelist and poet knows this as well as every expert in hydraulics or geomorphology. If the Mississippi possesses anything at all, it is agencyâsuch a powerful agency that it imposes itself on the agency of both regular people and the Army Corps of Engineers.â
Stuff has agency. Inanimate matter is not inert. Everything is always doing something. According to Bennett, hoarders are highly attuned to these truths, which many of us ignore. Non-hoarders can disregard the inherent vibrancy of matter because we live in a modern world in which the categories of matter and life are kept separate. âThe quarantines of matter and life encourage us to ignore the vitality of matter and the lively powers of material formations, such as the way omega-3 fatty acids can alter human moods or the way our trash is not âawayâ in landfills but generating lively streams of chemicals and volatile winds as we speak,â she writes. Hoarders suffer at the hands of their hoards. But the rest of us do, too: thatâs why a modern guru like Marie Kondo can become famous by helping us gain control over our material possessions. Bennett describes herself as something of a minimalistâbut her minimalism is driven by a sense of the agency of things. âI donât want to have such a clamor around,â she told me.
In a park called Druid Hill, we walked along a path through the woods. Bennett paused, then led us off the path, down a hill so steep that we had to grab at small branches and tree trunks to slow our descent. We stopped to consider an especially notable dead tree. I thought it looked a little wistful.
âItâs stretching its hands out to the sky!â Bennett said, lifting her own arms up and laughing.
In Bennettâs most recent book, âInflux & Efflux,â she describes an encounter with an Ailanthus altissima, or tree of heavenâa fast-growing tree with oval leavesâon one of her walks around Baltimore. âI saw a tree whose every little branch expanded and swelled with sympathy for the sun,â she writes. âI was made distinctly aware of the presence of something kindred to me.â Ailanthus altissima is often considered an invasive species. Bennettâs musings have an ethical component: if a nuisance tree, or a dead tree, or a dead rat is my kin, then everything is kinâeven a piece of trash. And Iâm more likely to value things that are kindred to me, seeing them as notable and worthy in themselves. Most environmentally minded people are comfortable with this kind of thinking when itâs applied to the pretty part of nature. Itâs strange to apply the concept of kinship to plastic gloves and bottle caps. Bennett aims to treat pretty much everything as potential kin.
Wearing bright-silver sneakers, she dropped her arms and headed off into the woods. I hastened to keep up with her. Soon, we stumbled upon something we found hard to precisely describe.
âWhat is that?â Bennett asked, her voice rising.
It seemed to be a shock of almost luminescent bright-orange stuff growing right out of the ground. She bent down to touch it.
âItâs plastic,â she said, at first disappointed but then intrigued. The individual orange bristles were sticking straight up, like vertical pine needles.
âHowâs it in?â Bennett asked. She turned to me. âTry to pull it out!â I leaned down, grabbed an orange handful, and yanked. It wouldnât budge.
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