Rage against the photocopier machine
Photocopier
rage is all the rage. A Canadian study by copier manufacturer Hewlett
Packard found 10% of users admitted hitting recalcitrant photocopying
machines. A further 30% said they “seriously wanted to kick or hit”
their photocopier but managed to exercise restraint.”You know there is
something seriously wrong with your photocopier at work when someone
has laminated an ‘out of order’ sign,” wailed one blogger. “One wants
such a frequently used sign to look its best, after all.”An agent for a
well-known brand of copying machines says each machine will jam or
suffer some sort of breakdown on average every 1000 copies. With the
average machine in a medium-sized office responsible for 3000 copies
every day, that means multiple opportunities for collective rage.
The
Hewlett Packard study blamed violence towards photocopiers on workplace
stress. In the comedy feature film Office Space, a photocopier comes to
represent the drudgery and blandness of office work and, in a cathartic
scene, is destroyed by a disaffected worker.But they’re not only an
agent of oppression. Photocopiers have underwritten the explosion in
zine culture, as illustrated by an exhibition currently showing in
Flinders Street Station’s Degraves subway. “Zines are a low-budget,
accessible ‘democracy of the multiple’ form of artistic and written
expression, usually centred around photocopier technology as an easy
and immediate form of reproduction,” says the blurb for Secrets of the
Photocopier: Exposing Australia’s Underground Zine Culture.Conformist
and counter-culture, the photocopier is a contradictory symbol of the
potential and the restrictions of modern life. Says Wilken: “We
understand so little about how we interact with everyday technologies.
They’re fascinating and quite odd. But I would hate to be one of those
people who work in places like Officeworks. It’s just too stressful.”