|
Product Description
The world is getting faster. This sentiment is proclaimed so often that it is taken for granted, rarely questioned or examined by those who celebrate the notion of an accelerated culture or by those who decry it. Sarah Sharma engages with that assumption in this sophisticated critical inquiry into the temporalities of everyday life. Sharma conducted ethnographic research among individuals whose jobs or avocations involve a persistent focus on time: taxi drivers, frequent-flyer business travelers, corporate yoga instructors, devotees of the slow-food and slow-living movements. Based on that research, she develops the concept of "power-chronography" to make visible the entangled and uneven politics of temporality. Focusing on how people's different relationships to labor configures their experience of time, she argues that both "speed-up" and "slow-down" often function as a form of biopolitical social control necessary to contemporary global capitalism.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- The Time of Our Lives: A Critical History of Temporality (The MIT Press)
- Pressed for Time: The Acceleration of Life in Digital Capitalism
- Bottleneck: Moving, Building, and Belonging in an African City
- Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code
- A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (Forerunners: Ideas First)
- Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas
- Sound, Space, and the City: Civic Performance in Downtown Los Angeles (The City in the Twenty-First Century)
- Righteous Dopefiend (Volume 21) (California Series in Public Anthropology)
- Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness
- How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy
*If this is not the "In the Meantime: Temporality and Cultural Politics" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 6, 2024 16:48 +08.