Re-classify Your Garbage
April 6th, 2008 . by Caleb Chao
Ever feel like everything you learned in college amounted to a pile of trash? Now, how about if that were a positive? In a piece that ran in the New York Times last week, Edward Rothstein turns a cultural critic’s eye on garbage in the modern age, referencing an NYU course offered last fall on creating a museum for the Department of Sanitation (from the syllabus: “What is the cognitive, practical, and cultural role of garbage in contemporary life?”) while making some wry observations about how and why we’ve come full-circle to embrace our refuse.
I first spotted this on Murketing, where Rob Walker followed up his post with an interesting link to a guy who literally sells trash — in little plastic cubes — and his prices are rising.
All this leads me to wonder: How accurate is Rothstein’s cultural barometer? Granted, there’s nothing new under the sun (or the mountains of trash baking in its heat). I remember re-interpreting trash from childhood D.I.Y. projects, designing many an aesthetically-questionable birdfeeder out of a rinsed-out Sprite liter bottle. But I think we’ve progressed since then, and if Rothstein is right, it’s with a renewed “feeling of virtue that seems to transcend considerations of cost.” Help kick-start my creative juices with some of your own ideas. How have you managed to re-classify your garbage?
















Caleb - first off, welcome to KGG! Great first article brother.
Recently, I’ve been saving all of my Dubble Bubble Gum wrappers. I’m planning to glue them around a blank photo frame and create a fun, colorful frame to give to Ashley.
What’s everyone doing?
::bryan
Caleb,
Welcome. I’m looking forward to your writing. The grossest/sweetest use of trash that I’m considering is using biodegradable baby diaper liners filled with baby poop as compost in a garden. On the less disgusting side, old climbing ropes can be woven in to excellent rugs.
::a