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I came across this and it looks super interesting: 

Terrains of Time: 

Modern Temporality(ies) in Social Sciences and Beyond 

 An International Workshop, Bar Ilan University, Israel June 14-15, 2020
 

Time has been studied, researched, and thought over for thousands of
years and across cultures. In recent decades, some accounts of the role
of time and temporality in human (and non-human) experiences proved
fruitful for contemporary thought and research. Those who dared to ask
St. Augustine's renowned question--"what, then, is time?"-- developed
vital and fascinating insights about human and non-human nature(s),
cultures, societies, environments, emotions, personalities, and
politics. A nuance- sensitive understanding of the social, cultural, and
political dimensions of time is of immense potential. 

Nevertheless, time as a category is an understudied topic in the
traditional humanities and social sciences. Even though Time Studies is
now institutionalized in academia (societies, journals, etc.), the field
has hardly crystalized into an organized body of knowledge with its own
defined and structured vocabulary, working assumptions, controversies,
and research agendas, to be reflected in other disciplines. Today, the
scholar of space, body and other similar categories can draw from these
fields' respective bodies of knowledge. But this is not always the case
with Time Studies. Is it a mere problem of institutionalization, or
rather does it have to do with Augustin's wonder, i.e. with the
elusiveness of the concept of time? 

The international workshop "Terrains of Time" is aimed at developing an
integrative and interdisciplinary conversation about time as a social
and cultural phenomenon, while accounting for global and local contexts.
 

Topics: 

¨    Time and temporality: definitions, analytical frameworks,
narratives, and symbolizations. 

¨    Time and related categories: space, body, and subjectivity. 

¨    Time and humanity; time in (or after) the Anthropocene. 

¨    Time and the social: The role of time in assembling and
disassembling individuals and groups, personalities and collectives,
actors and networks; measurement, standardization, multi-temporalities,
synchronization, and desynchronization. 

¨    Time and power: social and political struggles waged about time as
a resource, for example regarding status, gender, and labor; time in
public policy, social stratification (e.g. age stratification),
evaluation and criticism; Time regimes; Global, local, and networked
temporalities. 

¨    Time and the market: commodification, trading, and soliciting time;
Time poverty and affluence. 

¨    Micro-interactions: waiting, rushing, getting prepared, aging, time
wasting, "quality time," transitions, cheating on time. 

¨    Rituals of time, times of rituals. 

¨    Time and morality: temporal distributive justice. 

¨    Time in ecological challenges and technological developments. 

¨    Risk, readiness, and uncertainty (e.g. in future studies). 

¨    Time and cultural relativity: Are there groups that experience
"more" or "less" time, or groups that have "more" or "less" temporality?
Do certain groups care about time more than others? 

¨    Time and "the moderns": was the modern period embedded in
"temporalization of the experienced life", as maintained by Koselleck
and echoed in Latour's conceptualization of the modern?  Did a "temporal
turn" take place in history, and/or in theory? On the other hand, are
industrialized societies poorer in time (while being affluent in other
resources), as common wisdom so often holds? 

The workshop will explore the social, cultural, political, economic,
human, and environmental dimensions of time and temporality(ies) from a
variety of disciplinary perspectives, including, but not limited to:
philosophy, literature, psychology, geography, history, linguistics,
sociology, anthropology, gender studies, cultural studies, and science
and technology studies.

The workshop will take place at Bar Ilan University on June 14-15, 2020.
No registration fee is required, but we cannot assist with travel
expenses.

Confirmed guest speakers: 

¨    Barbara Adam, Emerita Professor, Cardiff University and Affiliate
Scholar, IASS Potsdam 

¨    Judy Wajcman, Anthony Giddens Professor of Sociology, London School
of Economics 

¨    Frédéric Worms, Professor of Philosophy, École normale supérieure 

Abstracts of up to 300 words for a 20-minute paper, with a short bio,
may be sent to: [log in to unmask] no later than January 15,
2020. Notifications of acceptance will be sent by February 15, 2020.

The international workshop is organized by the Research Group "It's
about Time", sponsored by Bar Ilan's Rector, Prof. Miriam Faust; and
under the auspices of the Bar Ilan Center for Cultural Sociology.
Organizing committee (alphabetical order): Anat Leibler, Miri Rozmarin,
Hizky Shoham, Dror Yinon (Interdisciplinary Studies Unit, Bar Ilan
University). 

-- 

Filip Vostal, Ph.D. 

Centre for Science, Technology, and Society Studies (STSS)
Institute of Philosophy of The Czech Academy of Sciences
Jilska 1, 110 00, Prague 1
Czech Republic

Tel: (+420) 221 183 341
Mob: (+420) 777 800 810
Email: [log in to unmask]
Twitter: @filvos
ORCID: 0000-0003-4628-9180

Editorial board Time & Society 

Latest publications:
"Acceleration Approximating Science and Technology Studies: On Judy
Wajcman's Recent Oeuvre." Science, Technology, & Human Values 44(4):
686-706 DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0162243919845140 

"Review of John Smyth, The Toxic University." Theory, Culture & Society
Website,
https://www.theoryculturesociety.org/review-of-john-smyth-the-toxic-university/,
Feb 15, 2019.

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