Do you make lists? Are you one of those people who, according to caricature, have no rest until the things of their lives rest in a list? Who don’t feel even their own being until being properly listed—be it by Google or by Post-It? Or else, perhaps, are you one of those who so valiantly inhabits the present moment that living in listless (hence the word) disorder gives no trouble to your mind?
I am a list-maker—about certain things. And I’ve learned a lot about friends by observing the things that they make lists of which I don’t. In my favorite film (after Star Treks I-VI, VII), Chris Marker’s Sans Soleil, I discovered that lists can be an art form, as they were in eleventh-century Japan:
Real power was in the hands of a family of hereditary regents; the emperor’s court had become nothing more than a place of intrigues and intellectual games. But by learning to draw a sort of melancholy comfort from the contemplation of the tiniest things this small group of idlers left a mark on Japanese sensibility much deeper than the mediocre thundering of the politicians. Shonagon [Sei Shonagon, a lady in waiting for the queen] had a passion for lists: the list of “elegant things,” “distressing things,” or even of “things not worth doing.” One day she got the idea of drawing up a list of “things that quicken the heart.”
In the minds of computers, lists take on a more subtle beauty, a more mechanical one. The power of a computer lies partly in its incredible quickness in making and managing lists of data.
I’d like to try a new kind of post at The Row Boat, a post of lists. This is the first of what may be many. They’ll be brainstorming sessions put onto the wondrous internet in order to invite contributions from friends and passers-by. To inaugurate it, we’ll start with a list of lists—more or less important lists that come to mind as indicators of all the different forms and all the different significances that a list can take. Please, for now and forever, offer your contributions in the comments or (if in secret) by email!
- The six days of creation in Genesis
- The HTML elements <ul> and <ol>, of which so many parts of websites are structured
- Susan Sontag’s early journals
- The programming language Scheme, or its parent LISP (List Processing Language)
- The great Scholastic lists: deadly sins, theological virtues, sacraments, etc.
- Some of the earliest writing on Sumerian tablets were lists of goods
- For that matter, the Code of Hammurabi
- The list of Eugene McCarthy
- The Vatican’s Index Librorum Prohibitorum (“List of Prohibited Books”)
- Luther’s 95 Theses
- Shopping lists, to do lists
- The round robin, a list without a top
- Top ___ lists
- Honor roll
- “Did you make the list?”
- Endangered species list
- The lists of Sei Shonagon
- Phonebook
- The Open Directory Project
- Santa’s list
- The Fortune 500
- Angie’s List, Craigslist
- Blacklist
- Most wanted list
- This list (to keep things nice and recursive)
Comments
2 responses to “Living in Lists”
The Ten Commandments, duh.
The 7 Deadly Sins (unintegrated passions) according to Blessed Isaac of Stella, a 12th century Cistercian abbot:
Pride separates us from God, Envy from our neighbor, Wrath from ourselves. Avarice knocks us to the ground, Sloth binds us, Gluttony consumes us, Lust turns us to dung.