The New Yorker - 30.03.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

last week of classes to focus on the site,
he said, "when it kind of blew up." His
mother, whose medical colleagues use
the site, had given up coaxing him to
return. "Maybe learning algebra can come
later," she said. (Her son is a C student.)
Schiffinann took the virus threat se-
riously before many others did. "I've
been kind of conc:cmed for a while, be-
cause I watched it spread very fast, and
around the entire world. I mean, it just
kind of went everywhere." He took his
own precautions. "I got masks a while
ago. I got, like, fifteen for seventeen dol-
lars. Now you can't even buy a single
mask for, like, leH than forty." His
mother chimed in. "I wish I had listened
to him," she said. "But, in his teen-ager
way, he'Cl come down the stairs with his
eyes huge and be, like, 'There are fifty
thousand more cases!' and I'd be, like,
'Yeah, but they're over there, not here."'
Now that the grownups of the wmld
arc finally, and appropriately, freaking
out, it is hard for Sc:hiflinann not to feel
righteous vindication.. "If you told some-
one three months ago that we should
spend, like, ten billion dollars in upgrad-
ing the United States' health care, they
would have been, like, 'Nab,"' he said.
"Now, everyone's, like, 'Oh, my God,
~·Buttb.isisthekindofstuffweshould
have done a long time ago."
-Brent Crane


DEPT. OF l\EGl\ESSION
INTEl\R.OGAllNG THE T.P. PANIC

B


ecauseyour Faa:book.fecd leads you
to belie\'lethatit'sacommoditymore
precious than gold. Because you use the
cardboard tubes for crafting. Because
you like to wet it and then hurl it in a
wad at annoying people in your corona-
virus bunker.
The possible explanations for toi-
let-paper hoarding are myriad. Unlike
hand sanitizer and test kits, toilet paper
is not a commodity subject to increased
need in the current crisis. Nevcrthdess,
shoppers continue to express a panic
mentality over bathroom tissue. The
fallout a newspaper in Australia recently
ran eight mostly blank pages for its read-


ll THE NEY ~MARCH 30, 2020


ers ("'Run out ofloo paper?" the tabloid
asked. "The NT News cares"); deter-
mining your fair share of Cottonelle at
your local Costco can now feel like Yalta.
What's fuelling all this obsessive-com-
pulsi.ve shopping? RandyO. Frost, a pro-
fessor of psycliology at Smith College,
who has written widely about hoarding,
said that most hoarders are motivated
by a combination of three .f.actois: emo-
tional or sentimental attachment, aes-
thetic appreciation, and utility. But
hoanlers of toilet paper, Frost said, are
compelled by only the third motivation.
"One of the underlying characteristics
of utility is an intolerance of uncertainty,"
he said over the phone. "The individual
needs to feel absolutely and perfectly
certain that some kind of negative out-
come won't occur."
But let's dig deeper; let us ask the
toil.et-paper-stockpiling patient (in a
calm voice), '%tees trohhling you?"
"Controlling cleanliness around
B.M.s is the earliest way the child as-
serts contro~" Andrea Greenman, the
president of the Contemporary Freud-
ian Society, said. "The fact that now we
are all presumably losing control creates
a regressive push to a very early time.
So, I guess that translates in the uncon-
scious to 'If I have a lifelong supply of
toilet paper, I'll never be out of control.
never be a helpless, dirty child again.'"
Freud believed that human beings
subconsciously equate feces with gold
01' money. In "On Transformations of
Instinct as Exemplified in Anal Ero-
tism, "the &ther of psychoanalysis wrote,
"Since his faeces are his first gift, the
child easily transfers his interest from
that substance to the new one which he
comes across a.s the most valuable gift
in life." The turning point in a child's
so-called anal phase is when he learns
to relinquish his "gift"--which, in tum,
occasions a loss of self. Toilet paper is
inextricably bound in our minds with
defecation, and is one of our few pub-
lic acknowledgments of it. Perhaps it
makes sense, then, that a cafC in Aus-
tralia recently decided to accept toilet
paper as aun:nc:y (thn:c rolls for a coffu:,
thirty-six rolls for a kilo of beans).
Is the panic-buying of toilet paper
primarily egoistic? Not according to
Susan Signe Morrison, the author of
"Excrement in the Late Middle Ages:
Sacred Filth and Chaucer's Fecopoet-

ia."jesus' corporal acts of mercy in-
clude caring for sick people. Wiping
someone's bottom is not specifically
mentioned, but when you think of tend-
ing to infants or old people who caiit
control their fecal production •.. "Mor-
rison said, trailing off with a delicacy
befitting the subject matter. "If we don't
have toilet paper, will we revile our fun-
ily members who aren't clean in the way
we expect them to be?"
According to one anthropologist, an
outer-directed motivation for toilet-pa-
per hoarding might even skew political.
"The places we see toilet paper men-
tioned are often tied up with politics,
especially in the movies," Grant Jun Ot-
suki, a lecturer in cultural anthropology
at Victoria University of Wellington,
New Zealand, said. "The turning point
of the movie 'V for Vendetta' is when
Evey discovers a letter written on toilet
paper by someone oppressed under the
totalitarian regime. Evey bc:oomes po-
litically awakened."
In a recent blog post subtit:lOO "A Cul-
tural Analysis of Toilet Paper," Otsuki
teases out a hierarchy of household paper
goods, from Bibles and diaries, at the
top, to old newspapers, to paper towels
and plates, down to toilet paper; noting
that this lowest item on the chain could
fairly smoothly perform many of the
functions of items higher up on the list,
but not vice versa. He concludes, "While
we may use fancy paper and pens to
write the basic laws of a nation, in some
way those words have no meaning un-
less they could also be written on toilet
paper and potentially carry the same
force. Without the poiw.'bility of a con-
stitution written on Charmin, modern
democracy would be unthinkable."
-HenryA!furd

11-IEl\E'S AN APP FOi\ THAT
TALKING TO STl\ANGERS

D


anielle Baskin and Max Hawkins
are multimedia artists who met at
a Halloween party in San Francisco, in


  1. Baskin was dressed as a lion with
    skeleton arms. Hawkins, who does "soft-
    ware-based performance work," was

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