[CR]A question of value (slightly long)

(Example: Racing:Beryl Burton)

From: "Paul Williams" <castell5@sympatico.ca>
To: <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
Date: Wed, 29 Jan 2003 11:39:51 -0500
Subject: [CR]A question of value (slightly long)

Hi folks,

I know that not too long ago we discussed the topic of perceived value of certain bicycles and the issue of parting out. However, this issue was brought home to me again yesterday when I made an enquiry of a seller on E-bay whose 1950s/60s "English" bicycle ( http://cgi.ebay.ca/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&categoryB0&item!54778576&rd=1 ) did not get any bids. I asked him if he was going to relist and noted that I had been travelling and was unable to get a bid in. The pictures were terrible and I also wanted to see more. His reply reads:

<< No, I did not have any more pictures. I think that's why I had no bids. it is in very poor shape so I plan on selling it as parts it is more Valuable that way. Thanks for the inquiry.>>

It is not a lightweight and not the usual thing we discuss on this list, nor the sort of bike that would usually interest me. But there was something about it - a certain charm, a certain tug at my British roots, and perhaps the challenge of restoration. It would be another good little winter project. Moreover, it is relatively complete (although he notes in poor condition - I haven't had a chance to ask him what he means by that) and kind of funky. I am not sure whether to reply to the seller, pleading with him not to part it out (although I must admit that I am also not sure that I wanted to pay that much for it). I am a little concerned by the mentality of parting out because "it is more Valuable that way," especially when a bike is virtually complete and largely original. It is a shame that, in this E-bay, or "Antiques Roadshow," universe, we are too often driven by the issue of monetary value and we tend to forget issues of social or cultural value: the intrinsic value of an object as a marker of our heritage, in this instance our cycling heritage.

In my academic work, I research this issue of "value." In particular, I look at the value we place on material things from the past and how these become important in bringing meaning to our lives and in establishing a sense of who we are and where we have come from. I am fascinated by the idea of the "cultural biography of things": What is their story? Who owned them? How have they been used? How have they been mis-used? How have they been altered? Where did they come from? Each object, each bike for that matter, has a story.

In my past career as an archaeologist, I taught about the problems associated with the un-scientific removal of artefacts from their archaeological contexts. How this strips an artefact of meaning - often rendering it meaningless in terms of date, association, and interpretation. Do we accomplish the same thing when we strip the parts from a bike (leaving aside the issues of replacing broken or worn parts) and sell each piece off individually? What will happen to frame #6097 when stripped of its parts? Will it end up in a landfill somewhere? Maybe that is where it should, and probably eventually will, end up. Maybe this bicycle isn't of any real value. Maybe parting-out is the next installment in its story, I don't know. What I do know is that it was valued by someone in the past and has come down to us today with a story or two to tell.

I would have liked someone who has an interest and an appreciation for bikes to have made the decision on its ultimate fate rather than someone who is clearly driven by the pursuit of the almighty buck. Perhaps I am becoming more nostalgic, but, maybe I just wanted to add yet another chapter to the "cultiural biography" of this particular bicycle. Maybe it is not too late.

Paul "perhaps waxing too lyrical" Williams, Ottawa, ON, Canada