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[ecrea] On time. Temporal & Normative Orderings of Mobilities - CfP
Fri Jan 05 23:55:59 GMT 2018
*Call for Papers*
*Workshop: On time. Temporal and normative ordering of mobilities*
*University of Siegen, Germany | September 13–14, 2018*
*
*
*with lectures by MONIKA BÜSCHER (Lancaster), ROB KITCHIN (Maynooth),
SVEN OPITZ (Marburg)*
*
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*More info*: http://blogs.uni-siegen.de/on-time/
*Organizers: *Claudio Coletta (Antwerp), Jörg Potthast (Siegen), Tobias
Röhl (Siegen), Susann Wagenknecht (Siegen)
Temporality and normativity are interwoven with one another: Timings
convey norms and norma-tive shifts. Rhythms enforce forms of life,
convey-ing rules and principles. Flows of time fit experi-ence and
expectation to one another producing specific versions of past, present
and future. The end of time conjures up both utopian and dysto-pian visions.
Yet, while the plurality of normative orders has emerged as a crucial
issue of social theory (Boltanski & Thévenot, 1999), its temporal
dy-namics have received little attention so far. And while the
accelerating dynamics of time (Rosa, 2015; Simmel, 1903; Benjamin, 1999;
Virilio, 1997; Wajcman & Dodd, 2017) as well as the plurality of
temporal orders have been recog-nized (Lefebvre, 2004), implications for
theoriz-ing normative orders remain unclear. In social theory, time has
been addressed as a social ordering principle (Zerubavel, 1982)
emphasiz-ing the symbolic dimension and the normative aspects of social
regularities. Especially with industrialization processes (Adam, 2004)
clock time has been naturalized as commodified, com-pressed, colonized
and controlled resource which regulates social relations. Normativity,
on the other hand, is typically understood through spa-tial and static
imagery, in terms of already given normative “spheres,” “reach” and
“binding force.” The normativity of time, in turn, is com-monly
backgrounded and kept “still” as a rather unproblematic, uncontested
convention guarded by technology. By temporalizing phenomena—e.g.
systems of gift exchange (Bourdieu, 1977)—a praxeological perspective
questions such static views on normative orders and shows how issues of
timing are integral to social practices.
To discuss the nexus of temporal and normative orders in empirical
detail and with ethnographic sensibility, we propose to focus on various
forms of (traffic and transport) mobility. With real-timing, punctuality
and synchronization as its crucial requirements, mobility brings the
plurality of temporal orders to the fore. Traffic and transport
mobilities rely on and create rhythms as “active producers of realities”
(Revill, 2013). Furthermore, mobile practices perform hybrid public
spaces where the plurality of temporal and normative orders becomes
especially palpable. In these spaces temporal and normative orders are
automated, technically embedded and mobi-lized—increasingly through
software and code (Kitchin and Dodge, 2011; Kitchin, in press).
Consequently, being mobile and/or mobilizing others makes the plurality
of normative and tem-poral orders an issue: distant spheres have to be
linked, gaps to be bridged, connections forged, groups coordinated,
timelines met, processes aligned etc.
Through the study of traffic and transport mobili-ties we direct
attention to the intricate relations that multiple temporal and
normative orders unfold in practice. Temporal and normative or-ders
overlap and interfere; they support and challenge one another. We seek
to develop both a normative notion of time as well as a dynamic notion
of normativity: temporality as a fundamen-tal normative issue,
normativity as a temporal phenomenon through and through. In so doing,
we aim to reconcile a praxeological account (so-cial order as practical
accomplishment) with normative notions of sociality (social order as
moral order)—a notion present in proto-praxeological social theory (most
prominently, ethnomethodology and interactionism) but ab-sent in most
theorizing thereafter, only gaining weight again in current theorizing.
With this theo-retical interest in traffic and transport mobilities, we
propose to expand on recent mobility studies (e.g. Büscher, Urry, &
Witchger, 2010; Cresswell, 2006; Krämer & Schindler, 2016; Jensen, 2015;
Urry, 2007), for which theoretical and empirical issues are always
intertwined.
To explore the nexus of temporal and normative orders, we invite papers
that deal empirically and/or conceptually with the relation of
norma-tive and temporal orders in the field of mobilities. Possible
questions include:
Punctuality: Why is punctuality a norm frequently encountered when
dealing with organized traffic and transport? Why is it still upheld
despite trains, flights, ferries, cars, and busses often being late? How
are different forms of mobilities linked to punctuality? What does it
mean to be punctual when driving by car or travelling by plane?
Real-timeness, synchronization, anticipation, prediction/prioritization:
How do different forms of temporality occur? How are they arranged and
organized?
Rhythm and flow: When is rhythm enforced (rhythm as enforced
discipline), when does it become a flow (rhythm as a skillful way of
han-dling time)? Which forms of eurhythmia, arrhyth-mia and polyrhythmia
take place? Through what kind of infrastructures?
Experience: How do experiences of time develop a normative force when we
are mobile?
Control: How is the plurality of normative and temporal orders in
transport and traffic moni-tored and regulated? How are temporal gaps
and normative splits managed in practice?
Conflict and competing demands of time: When can issues of timing in
traffic and transport help settle conflicts, when do they generate and
am-plify conflict? How do they interfere?
Breakdown of orders: How to keep on track when rhythms fall apart and
time estimates become obsolete? What are temporal and normative orders
of breakdown and catastrophe?
Scaling: How are norms of traffic uphold over longer periods of time?
How do actors scale their actions so that norms become relatively
durable? What are the different scales that can be identi-fied when
talking about the temporality and nor-mativity of traffic?
If you are interested in presenting a paper, please send an abstract
(max. 300 words) to (on_time /at/ uni-siegen.de)
<mailto:(on_time /at/ uni-siegen.de)> until 15th of February 2018.
To facilitate discussions during the workshop participants will be asked
to hand in short papers (approx. 3,000–4,000 words) no later than 15th
of July 2018.
Non-tenured researchers attending the workshop may apply for a refund of
their travel and ac-comodation costs!
*Important dates*
Feb 15, 2018 - deadline for submission of abstracts (max. 300 words)
Mar 23, 2018 - notification of acceptance
Jul 15, 2018 - deadline for submission of short exploratory papers
(3,000–4,000 words)
Sep 13–14, 2018 - workshop
http://blogs.uni-siegen.de/on-time/
*References*
Adam, B. (2004). Time, Cambridge, Polity Press.
Benjamin, W. (1999). The Arcades Project, Cam-bridge, MA: The Belknap
Press of Har-vard University Press.
Boltanski, L., & Thévenot, L. (1999). The Sociolo-gy of Critical
Capacity. European Journal of Social Theory, 2(3), 359–377.
Bourdieu, P. (1977). Outline of a Theory of Prac-tice, Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press.
Büscher, M., Urry, J., & Witchger, K. (Eds.) (2010). Mobile Methods.
London/New York: Routledge.
Cresswell, T. (2006). On the Move: Mobility in the Modern Western World.
London/New York: Routledge.
Kitchin, R. (in press) The Realtimeness of Smart Cities. Tecnoscienza, 8(2).
Kitchin, R. and Dodge, M. (2011). Code/Space: Software and Everyday
Life, Cambridge, MIT Press.
Jensen, O. B. (2015). Mobilities. London/New York: Routledge.
Krämer, H., & Schindler, L. (Eds.) (2016). Mobil-tät (Special Issue of
the Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie 41(1)) Wiesba-den:
Springer VS.
Lefebvre, H. (2004). Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday Life.
London/New York: Continnuum.
Revill, G. (2013). Points of Departure: Listening to Rhythm in the
Sonoric Spaces of the Railway Station. The Sociological Re-view, 61
(S1), 51–68.
Rosa, H. (2015). Social Acceleration. New York: New York University Press.
Simmel, G. (1971). The Metropolis and Mental life. In Donald Levine
(Ed.), Simmel: On Individuality and Social Forms (p. 324). Chicago:
Chicago University Press.
Urry, J. (2007). Mobilities. Cambridge: Polity.
Virilio, P. (1997). Open Sky, London, Verso.
Wajcman, J., & Dodd, N. (Eds.) (2017). The Sociology of Speed: Digital,
Organiza-tional, and Social Temporalities. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Zerubavel, E. (1982). The Standardization of Time: A Sociohistorical
Perspective. American Journal of Sociology, 88(1), 1–23.
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