Naturally Late: Synchronization in Socially Constructed Times

Is time a natural reality that social symbols such as clocks and calendars merely contingently represent? Lateness protocols seemingly exhibit such contingency, for not all cultures regulate synchronization identically. Just as social/cultural time structures are interpreted to diverge from time’s natural rhythm, body modifications are often presented as social productions that divert human bodies from their naturally originated, corporeal temporality. A similar separation informs climate change discourses, supposing a natural rhythm that industrialized culture has invaded, the effects of which humans might be too late to arrest.

Interrogating this conceptual separation matters, given that if certain times are considered to be more natural than others, a situated politics emerges regarding the associated cultural structures. Furthermore, our personal investments in experiences of lateness, which are embedded within social time, seemingly contradict the constructionist impression that social time is merely a contingent misrepresentation of what time actually is. Through Derridian deconstruction, Merleau-Pontian phenomenology, and Bergsonian time-philosophy, complemented with voices from fields including object oriented ontology, new materialism, and new criticism, this book re-evaluates the timing of times from a philosophical perspective.



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Naturally Late: Synchronization in Socially Constructed Times

Is time a natural reality that social symbols such as clocks and calendars merely contingently represent? Lateness protocols seemingly exhibit such contingency, for not all cultures regulate synchronization identically. Just as social/cultural time structures are interpreted to diverge from time’s natural rhythm, body modifications are often presented as social productions that divert human bodies from their naturally originated, corporeal temporality. A similar separation informs climate change discourses, supposing a natural rhythm that industrialized culture has invaded, the effects of which humans might be too late to arrest.

Interrogating this conceptual separation matters, given that if certain times are considered to be more natural than others, a situated politics emerges regarding the associated cultural structures. Furthermore, our personal investments in experiences of lateness, which are embedded within social time, seemingly contradict the constructionist impression that social time is merely a contingent misrepresentation of what time actually is. Through Derridian deconstruction, Merleau-Pontian phenomenology, and Bergsonian time-philosophy, complemented with voices from fields including object oriented ontology, new materialism, and new criticism, this book re-evaluates the timing of times from a philosophical perspective.



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Naturally Late: Synchronization in Socially Constructed Times

Naturally Late: Synchronization in Socially Constructed Times

by Will Johncock Lecturer in Sociology, UNSW Sydney
Naturally Late: Synchronization in Socially Constructed Times

Naturally Late: Synchronization in Socially Constructed Times

by Will Johncock Lecturer in Sociology, UNSW Sydney

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Overview

Is time a natural reality that social symbols such as clocks and calendars merely contingently represent? Lateness protocols seemingly exhibit such contingency, for not all cultures regulate synchronization identically. Just as social/cultural time structures are interpreted to diverge from time’s natural rhythm, body modifications are often presented as social productions that divert human bodies from their naturally originated, corporeal temporality. A similar separation informs climate change discourses, supposing a natural rhythm that industrialized culture has invaded, the effects of which humans might be too late to arrest.

Interrogating this conceptual separation matters, given that if certain times are considered to be more natural than others, a situated politics emerges regarding the associated cultural structures. Furthermore, our personal investments in experiences of lateness, which are embedded within social time, seemingly contradict the constructionist impression that social time is merely a contingent misrepresentation of what time actually is. Through Derridian deconstruction, Merleau-Pontian phenomenology, and Bergsonian time-philosophy, complemented with voices from fields including object oriented ontology, new materialism, and new criticism, this book re-evaluates the timing of times from a philosophical perspective.




Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781786611949
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 04/15/2019
Series: New Critical Humanities
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 252
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Will Johncock has lectured in Sociology at UNSW Sydney. He has published book chapters, and articles in journals including Philosophy Today, Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, Health Care Analysis, and Phenomenology and Practice.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements / Introduction: The Timing of Times / 1. Social Times: Contingent Constructions? / 2. Relatively Late: Cultural Plurality and Modified Bodies / 3. Subjective Times: Transcending the Present? / 4. (De)constructed Bodies: Are Modifications Late to the Corporeal Scene? / 5. Material Climates, Material Theories: A Late Response or a Self-Reflection? / 6. Methods of Accommodating Lateness: The Representation Inside the Real/ Notes/ Bibliography
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