You can tell this isn't a real TED talk because there aren't any pictures or videos. But here goes.
Do you ever feel binaried out?
Like you spend your days following instructions – and it’s good, in a way,
because the instructions work, so everything turns out okay, and you know
you’re being efficient. But you’re not quite sure what you did. And
all those instructions start to nag at you from time to time because you have a
vague feeling that you don’t actually understand what you’re doing.
I crochet because I get binaried out a
lot.
There is something wonderful in the
process of taking readily available materials, using a fairly simple tool,
knowing how to use that tool, and turning that material into a finished
something that I can send out into the world to be useful, knowing that it will
be useful in a quiet, sturdy, rich, individual way that is not exactly like
anything else.
I can do this because I learned crafts
as a child, learned from my mother, who practiced crafts, not for fun, but for
usefulness. Starting early, enjoying the process, and keeping it as part
of my life, I look at the materials (the yarn), think about needs to be met,
and figure out a pleasing way that the yarn can be arranged to meet the need,
even if it's only a dishcloth. This is totally cool.
The process of stitching is
rich: When I’m stitching, I’m not eating. I’m also generally not
shooting my mouth off, being rude to people, not being destructive to myself,
to my environment, or to my society.
The process of stitching is
soothing. It is a physical contemplation. Some say it is cheaper
than therapy, although I haven’t seen scientific studies to compare the two to
see how each scores on specific metrics. And it’s legal.
The process of stitching is an
exercise that connects my thinking brain with my small-motor-skills hands, with
my environment of materials and needs. Even further, it connects me with
the people who use the things I make. A world of connectivity.
Again, totally cool.
Much of this can be said for other
crafts, so, why crochet?
On the one hand, consider other
crafts. Crafts that have been around for a long time, thousands of years
– like weaving, knitting, woodworking, ceramics – all have some things in
common. They started out being incredibly useful for making things that
made survival easier, at a reasonable cost. Then, each became
industrialized, reduced to a set of steps.
It is interesting to see how much of these crafts surround us in our
everyday lives. Each also retained a basic level of one-off production,
now seen as an artistic medium. Here is a spectrum of activity, from
mass-production to individual artistic expression. And the two ends of
the spectrum feed off each other. Mass-produced
goods keep from getting too cheap because there is the balance that people can
still make stuff for themselves. At the same time, people can look at
mass-produced goods and say, “I could do that myself!” and are encouraged to
learn the crafts.
Take knitting, for example: If
there were a magic wand that could make disappear everything that was knitted,
most of us would not have underwear. There would be no T-shirts, very
little athletic wear. A lot the fabric in our lives would
disappear. That’s how much a part of our identity knitting is. Yet,
at the same time, knitting guilds celebrate hand-knitting, with members who
knit for themselves, for family, for friends, and for charity.
The potential of this process, removed
from embellishing fabric, to create fabric was wildly popular in the 1800s.
There were suggestions that the servant class should not be allowed to
crochet, to prevent them from having thoughts of accomplishment beyond their station.
Husbands complained that their wives were neglecting their household
duties because of it. Crochet could imitate cheaply and quickly intricate
forms of lace-making that had been around for centuries, yet in a new way that
let the stitcher undo mistakes and rework the fabric easily.
As a cottage industry, there may have
been few barriers to entry: The lace
crochet needle, or hook, was made by modifying a sewing needle and sticking it
into a cork for a handle. The single hook, possibly made from a
worn-out sewing needle (cheap to make), took the place of all the fancy equipment
of other techniques.
Yarn hooks are bigger, for stitching
with yarn, and presented a technical difficulty: Even though the hook
seems simple, it probably took the Industrial Revolution to be able to
manufacture them with the strength, consistent sizing, and a finish smooth
enough to be useful.
Once crochet developed its own
identity, people started trying to imitate weaving and knitting for all kinds
of clothing and household fabrics. Without a long history, though,
crochet as a serious craft was, and is, still in its infancy. We are
still exploring what crochet is good for. Most of the crochet we see is
about the stitches – pattern stitches, stitch texture, and how the textures
interact with color. In a world where we can go out and buy anything we
need, cheaply and disposably - which has been more and more true over the last
200 years – crochet has been limited to an artistic identity, to be a way to
have fun, for the middle class, and also as a therapy (both physical and psychological) for mentally retarded people (that's the phrase we've used) or for soldiers suffering from shell shock, battle fatigue, or PTSD, as we call it now. The focus has never been particularly on the usefulness of the finished product.
We’re getting close to exploring the
craft for what the fabric can do. Compared to knitting (with which
crochet almost shares the most basic elements of yarnovers, pull-throughs, and
inserts as the key elements), crochet makes a fabric that is textured and
sturdy. Knitting, in comparison, makes a
fabric that is lightweight and elastic.
Put in a negative light, crochet makes a fabric that is thick and heavy,
and knitting makes a fabric that is wimpy and thin. Focusing on the stitches – the textures – and
the few materials associated with crochet, there hasn’t been much emphasis on
the properties of the fabric and the wider range of possible materials.
The use of crochet by Margaret and Christine
Wertheim in constructing artistic coral reefs is a step in a new direction. There’s a great TED talk about that from
2009.
Now, with so much of our lives and our
work being impacted by big data and the efficiency of not only industry but
automation and artificial intelligence, it’s easy to get binaried out. We
have become very efficient at being efficient. On the one hand, efficiency has been seen as an unalloyed good: Industrial efficiency over the last hundred years has
lifted the human population out of poverty, raised the global standard of
living, to a degree never before seen. On the other hand, there have been costs, both to the environment
and to the quality of our lives as workers. Lots of folks are working on the
environmental bit, but I want to address the meaningful work bit here.
The nature of efficiency is to remove
the human element from manufacturing or any other process. This can leave
workers in a position where their work is dehumanizing – not meaningful work –
and challenges them to search to regain their sense of humanity outside of work -- if they have the time to do that. For some workers, there is comfort in
the idea that the company they work for is doing really good work – but that is
the company's, not the worker’s, work. What
is strange is that while marketing sends us on a wild goose chase after
happiness, the most efficient way for humans actually to realize that they are
happy is by doing meaningful work: work that resonates, is useful, that involves understanding the
methodology – the opposite of following instructions - and that is supported/appreciated by the group.
In this process of becoming more
efficient through scaling up everything, we have managed to go from a society
that asks, “Why spend good money buying something ready-made when you can make
it better so easily at home?” to “Why waste your time trying to make something
when you don’t know how and you can buy it so easily at the store?” We’ve
gone from being problem-solver members of groups to being consumer individuals. And money - a man-made construct that does not exist in nature - is essentially the only socially acceptable problem-solving methodology, in addition to being a significant indicator of social status.
Granted, anything useful you can make
in crochet, you can go out and buy, ready-made, efficiently produced, most
likely from someplace outside the US, for less money, most likely by some
method other than crochet. So why crochet anything useful?
Unlike knitting, crochet is not binary
– it hasn’t been industrialized. It is complex at a basic level, with
five basic stitches, compared to the one basic stitch in knitting. There
is no crochet machine. Crochet is subversive that way. A human being
crocheting is a lot like a 3-D printer making something. But just because a 3-D printer can make useful stuff, why should I hand over to a machine the most
efficient way for me to be happy? Is the imperative for mass production worth the cost of our humanity?
Crocheting some of the stuff I use
every day makes me feel good, empowered – I’m doing my little bit to reduce the
impact of mass-production in my life. And there’s no machine that can
replace what I am doing.
But there's an interesting thing
beyond that: When lots of people do things for themselves, corporations start to notice – they may focus on some our improvements for
their products so they can sell more, or at least retain market-share.
When people don’t make the stuff they use, mass-producers can increase
their own efficiency and reduce costs by simplifying what they make – which can
make their products less useful for us. And if we aren’t making our own
stuff, we don’t notice that the stuff we buy isn’t as useful as it could
be.
Notice the effect of the slow-food
movement on the food industry. Mass producers of food figured out that we
crave salt, sugar, and fat – all of which are necessary, in small amounts, for
survival. In large amounts, which is profitable for mass-production,
these same ingredients are linked to obesity, cancer, and heart
disease. As people realize how easy it is to grow and cook – and to understand how to grow and cook – nutritious food, mass-producers of food are
now starting to make their own products more nutritious.
And to top all this off, when children
learn problem-solving methodologies (through play, not just through following
instructions) in the family (the natural basic unit of society), they take into adulthood the empowering understanding that there
is probably a way to deal with other problems and needs they face in
life. They understand to look for ways, rather than simply to hire someone else to do it for them.
Now, I can’t make all the stuff I
need. But there’s a balance between mass production and individual
production. If we all each spend some of our time making some things that are
useful - even if it is something as small and simple as a dishcloth - together
we keep that lively balance going to make life better for everyone, with the
side effect of being happy.
Thank you.
Comments
I bought your video (top down cardigan) several years ago but lost the paper instructions. Is it possible to get a copy?
Best,
Anne
I can help you if you give me an email address. I am mcrochets on Ravelry, if you are on Ravelry - you can message me there. If you comment on this post with your information, I will not post your comment but I will reply to you. Does that help?