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Odd Temporalities

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Organizer: Juan Meneses

Co-Organizer: Matthew Scully

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At one level, power is about the control of time. This is not so much a question of “what happens when?” but, rather, of deciding “when do things happen?” While this is a strategy of direct control, other subtler forms of governing time pertain to the rhythm of things. Establishing the tempo, whether it is the enforcement of imperial history as the official and neutral chronicle of modernity, the imposition of a totalizing global synchronicity by capitalist globalization, or the prescription of how we should conduct our personal lives, to name a few salient manifestations, is proof that timing can be a major force of correction and coercion.



From linear notions of progress to tautological conceptions of power, normative forms of temporality have proven pervasive in hegemonic forms of regulation and management. For Karl Marx, the capitalist mode of production and its self-perpetuation depend on the manipulation of time, yet his critique demonstrates that the past of this system is marked by contingency and violence while its promised future is in fact futureless to the people subjugated and exploited by processes of extraction and expropriation. More recently, a range of theorists have challenged notions of temporality that depend on the fundamental exclusion of different parts of the population, including Black (Saidiya Hartman), queer (Lee Edelman), Indigenous (Glen Coulthard), and immigrant subjects (Dylan Rodríguez). With the current realities of ecocide, scholars have also increasingly reckoned with conceptions of the past, present, and future that perpetuate anthropocentric fantasies.



As such critiques emphasize, these temporal pressures are indeed real, yet the world continues to resist homogenization on a variety of fronts. Taking a global approach, this seminar seeks to explore the aesthetic valences of a variety of odd temporalities that, in reclaiming a contingency mustered against the grain of normalized time, seek to continuously redefine our current historical moment. Such approaches ask how odd temporalities potentially sever, disrupt, or knot homogenized time in generative ways. We therefore aim to consider the aesthetic and political implications of non-normative temporalities that refuse to be ordered.



Papers may approach the following topics:



  • Asynchronicity

  • Stoppage

  • Afrofuturism

  • Arrhythmic convulsion

  • Queer time

  • Disconnection

  • Automation and Disruption

  • Disability

  • Crisis

  • Obsolescence

  • Long and short durées

  • Weird times

  • International law

  • Non-western temporalities

  • Uncertainty and insecurity

  • Systemic whiplash

  • Ahistoricism

  • Center-Periphery tensions

  • Utopia/Dystopia

  • Sequential disorder

  • History from below

  • Ecology and extinction

  • Anachronism

  • Chronotope

Any questions should be addressed to Juan Meneses (juan.meneses@charlotte.edu) and Matthew Scully (matthew.scully@unil.ch). Abstracts should be submitted via the ACLA portal.


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