An altered version of this article originally appeared on EdenKeeper.
For a little while now I've been living, along with my girlfriend Marie, in the house in which I grew up. We've been cleaning it up, sorting through its contents, and trying to make it into an enjoyable habitat at the same time. In the almost 200 years of its existence, the house has accumulated quite a number of items, despite a much larger number that have been discarded. While rummaging through the current contents, we've found a number of curious objects, everything from Tempscribes to speakeasy doors serving as walls. These things appear – depending on who looks at them – as historical, as sentimental, or as junk.
In between treasure hunts, I happened
to come across, on the Wikipedia entry for Walter Benjamin, Margaret
Cohen's definition of the concept of
tikkun:
“According to the Kabbalah, God's attributes were once held in vessels whose glass was contaminated by the presence of evil and these vessels had consequently shattered, disseminating their contents to the four corners of the earth. Tikkun was the process of collecting the scattered fragments in the hopes of once more piecing them together.”Having only ever heard the term in reference to the radical French journal Tiqqun, this idea of “collecting the scattered fragments in the hopes of once more piecing them together” resonated with me, especially in the work we've been doing in the house.
Rereading
it, On the Concept of History (as
it's also known) retained its difficult blend of mysticism and
theory. I had a slightly better grasp on it this time... but not by
much. However, one section stood out strongly for me. Benjamin begins
paragraph XI (the essay consists of 20 numbered paragraphs) by
criticizing the social democracy movement for putting all its faith
in labor, progress, technology, and the intersection of all three. As
a capstone to this belief, Benjamin cites one of the movement's most
influential philosophers, Joseph Dietzgen: “Labor
is the savior of modern times… In the… improvement… of labor…
consists the wealth, which can now finally fulfill what no redeemer
could hitherto achieve.” Benjamin, continuing in the same
paragraph, counters as follows:
“This vulgar-Marxist concept of what labor is, does not bother to ask the question of how its products affect workers, so long as these are no longer at their disposal. It wishes to perceive only the progression of the exploitation of nature, not the regression of society. It already bears the technocratic traces which would later be found in Fascism. Among these is a concept of nature which diverges in a worrisome manner from those in the socialist utopias of the Vormaerz period [pre-1848]. Labor, as it is henceforth conceived, is tantamount to the exploitation of nature, which is contrasted to the exploitation of the proletariat with naïve self-satisfaction.”(He closes out the paragraph with an appreciated tribute to Fourier, who believed a fair division in labor would lead to three more moons in the sky and the oceans turning into lemonade. Benjamin sees Fourier's vision as “a labor which, far from exploiting nature, is instead capable of delivering creations whose possibility slumbers in her womb.”)
Faced
with a nearly empty living room upon arrival, we would have had to
drive 186 miles to get to the closest IKEA, but the trip would have
been pointless (and wasteful). We've since found a comfortable chair
from the corner of my childhood bedroom, an old rocking chair from
the attic, a '70s-era green chair from the family cottage, and a
wooden barrel, re-purposed as a drink-stand, from the garage. Rather
than supporting the labor and destruction of natural resources
necessary for new furniture, we've put together a pleasantly livable,
albeit mismatched, living room set from found resources. We're not
exactly piecing together God's attributes from the four corners of
the earth, but as much as we can, we collect bits of history – from
the far corners of the house – and try to put them to good use.