The History of Boredom
You’ve never been so interested in being bored
- By Linda Rodriguez McRobbie
- Smithsonian.com, November 20, 2012, Subscribe
This Sunday, 500 people will flock to a conference hall in East London to be bored. Over the course of seven hours, they will hear talks on, among other things, pylons, self-service checkouts, double-yellow lines – as in the ones on the road – shop fronts and gardening.
“Quite why anyone else would want to go is a mystery,” says James Ward, 31, the conference’s organizer. Ward, a marketer for a major British retailer, says that the conference started by accident: In 2010, after learning that the Interesting Conference, a day of talks put on by Wired writer Russell Davies, was cancelled, he tweeted – jokingly – that he ought to put on a Boring Conference.
His suggestion would have come to nothing if he hadn’t already earned a number of followers through his blog, a paean to mundane things like stationary. Within a half an hour, he says, the conference was happening. “Never joke on the Internet about doing something, because you may have to do it,” he says. Ward and his followers are in good or at least famous company: One of Andy Warhol’s celebrated bon mots was “I like boring things.” But as Ward admits, the Boring Conference isn’t actually boring. “It’s things that on the surface would appear boring, but aren’t,” Ward explains. In fact, a number of speakers from the cancelled Interesting Conference simply rehashed their talks for the Boring Conference that first year. “The name is slightly misleading, but it’s a good name.”
For Ward, boring and interesting are two sides of the same coin; one man’s pylons is another man’s Playboy. But what does it really mean to be bored? And more importantly, what does being bored do to and say about you?
Boredom’s Origins
“Boredom” first became a word in 1852, with the publication of Charles Dickens’ convoluted (and sometimes boring) serial, Bleak House; as an emotional state, it obviously dates back a lot further. Roman philosopher Seneca talks about boredom as a kind of nausea, while Greek historian Plutarch notes that Pyrrhus (he of the “Pyrrhic victory”) became desperately bored in his retirement. Dr. Peter Toohey, a Classics professor at the University of Calgary, traced the path of being bored in 2011 in Boredom: A Lively History.
Among the stories he uncovered was one from the 2nd century AD in which one Roman official was memorialized with a public inscription for rescuing an entire town from boredom (the Latin taedia), though exactly how is lost to the ages. And the vast amount of ancient graffiti on Roman walls is a testament to the fact that teenagers in every era deface property when they have nothing else to do.
In Christian tradition, chronic boredom was “acedia”, a sin that’s sort of a proto-sloth. The “noonday demon”, as one of its early chroniclers called it, refers to a state of being simultaneously listless and restless and was often ascribed to monks and other people who led cloistered lives. By the Renaissance, it had morphed from a demon-induced sin into melancholia, a depression brought on by too aggressive study of maths and sciences; later, it was the French ennui.
In the 18th century, boredom became a punitive tool, although the Quakers who built the first “penitentiary” probably didn’t see it that way. In 1790, they constructed a prison in Philadelphia in which inmates were kept in isolation at all hours of the day. The idea was that the silence would help them to seek forgiveness from God. In reality, it just drove them insane.
Studying boredom
It wasn’t until the 1930s that science took an interest in boredom. In 1938, psychologist Joseph Ephraim Barmack looked at how factory workers coped with the tedium of being factory workers. Stimulants – caffeine, amphetamines, and ephedrine – was the answer.
Barmack was particularly concerned with what can be termed situational boredom, the kind of boredom that is perceived as a temporary state, such as being on a long car ride. This kind of boredom is relieved by change, or, as Barmack found, drugs.
But modern psychologists think boredom might be a lot more complicated than that. It’s appropriate that Dickens coined the word boredom, as literature is littered with characters for whom boredom became dangerously existential (think Madame Bovary, Anna Karenina or Jack Torrance in The Shining. What countless novels of the 19th and 20th century showed was that boredom has a much darker side, that it can be something much more akin to depression.
Recent scientific research agrees: A host of studies have found that people who are easily bored may also be at greater risk for depression, anxiety disorders, gambling addictions, eating disorders, aggression and other psychosocial issues. Boredom can also exacerbate existing mental illness. And, according to at least one 2010 study, people who are more easily bored are two-and-a-half times more likely to die of heart disease than people who are not.
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Comments (12)
*stationery*
Posted by Miss Spelled on December 10,2012 | 01:55 PM
I believe that the mind can sill wander just as well as when it's not bored. Funny that I came across this while I was bored.
Posted by kay sun on December 5,2012 | 09:37 PM
Was this article phoned in? I can understand that not everything can be a gem and working writers have their constraints, but this piece is disappointingly superficial and glib on a topic that should inspired more.
Posted by gary stonum on December 4,2012 | 04:39 PM
a very insightful article! boredom is a result of a lack of attention. the world is an amazing, scary place. look at it clearly and one can never be bored.
Posted by dapper dan on November 28,2012 | 01:10 PM
I would be interested to know about any thoughts for 'physical' boredom. Say, if the mind is busy doing something that requires full logical and creative attention. I very much enjoy doing homework. Sometimes while I'm doing homework I feel the need to be doing something physically. Usually it turns into snacking or smoking because there's not much else to do physically while my mind is occupied. It feels much like an anxiety. This can also be so distracting to the point that it's difficult to focus. Or would that simply be a completely different arena?
Posted by Joanna on November 26,2012 | 04:13 PM
While reading this, my mind started to wander......
Posted by Deb on November 25,2012 | 07:42 PM
Train yourself to be able to think entertaining thoughts.
Posted by Laura Reich on November 25,2012 | 07:30 PM
My mother had an excellent cure for boredom. If we complained of being bored, she would put a vacuum cleaner hose or dust rag in our hand. She figured as long as we were bored, we might as well be a help around the house. We quickly learned never to be bored.
Posted by P.M.Boylan on November 25,2012 | 06:52 PM
I can see how 'stationary' could be very, very boring!
Posted by LMiranda on November 25,2012 | 03:49 PM
I think keeping busy and productive can avoid boredom. I haven't been bored since the late '90s.
Posted by Jason TEPOORTEN on November 25,2012 | 03:09 PM
It brings to mind a classic French saying (translated): I don't get bored, they bore me.
Posted by Marcelo Salup on November 25,2012 | 11:13 AM
"Mundane things like stationary." Remaining stationary by standing still? Or *stationery*, the fancy writing paper?
Posted by GoddessOfCarbs on November 25,2012 | 08:49 AM