Temps Sensible

Temps Sensible
Title Temps Sensible PDF eBook
Author Julia Kristeva
Publisher Columbia University Press
Pages 436
Release 1996
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780231102506

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Not only a meditation on Proust, this is a commentary on how the experience of literature is manifested in time and sensation. Kristeva uses Proust as a starting point to reflect upon broader notions of character, time, sensation, metaphor, and history.

Proust and the Sense of Time

Proust and the Sense of Time
Title Proust and the Sense of Time PDF eBook
Author Julia Kristeva
Publisher Columbia University Press
Pages 132
Release 1993
Genre Psychoanalysis and literature
ISBN 9780231084789

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Kristeva presents a thoroughly original and compelling reading of Proust's Remembrance of Things Past, drawing on Proust's notebooks and manuscripts.

Time-sense

Time-sense
Title Time-sense PDF eBook
Author Swami Purushottamananda
Publisher Sri Ramakrishna Math
Pages 21
Release
Genre
ISBN

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Time plays a decisive role in a student’s life. Now-a-days many students waste their time in useless pursuits particularly in the beginning of an academic year. Later when exams are near they complain that they don’t have sufficient time to complete their portions. This points to their lack of clear thinking about value of time. This booklet “Time Sense” deals with these problems and shows a way to solve them. Besides dealing with the subject of time management this booklet also contains a section on how a student can make use of the practice of prayer to enhance his self-confidence and concentration.

A Sense of Place, a Sense of Time

A Sense of Place, a Sense of Time
Title A Sense of Place, a Sense of Time PDF eBook
Author John Brinckerhoff Jackson
Publisher Yale University Press
Pages 228
Release 1994-01-01
Genre Science
ISBN 9780300063974

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J.B. Jackson, a pioneer in the field of landscape studies, here takes us on a tour of American landscapes past and present, showing how our surroundings reflect important changes in our culture. Because we live in urban and industrial environments that are constantly evolving, says Jackson, time and movement are increasingly important to us and place and permanence are less so. We no longer gain a feeling of community from where we live or where we assemble but from common work hours, habits, and customs. Jackson examines the new vernacular landscape of trailers, parking lots, trucks, loading docks, and suburban garages, which all reflect this emphasis on mobility and transience; he redefines roads as scenes of work and leisure and social intercourse--as places, rather than as means of getting to places; he argues that public parks are now primarily for children, older people, and nature lovers, while more mobile or gregarious people seek recreation in shopping malls, in the street, and in sports arenas; he traces the development of dwellings in New Mexico from prehistoric Pueblo villages to mobile homes; and he criticizes the tendency of some environmentalists to venerate nature instead of interacting with it and learning to share it with others in temporary ways. Written with his customary lucidity and elegance, this book reveals Jackson's passion for vernacular culture, his insights into a style of life that blurs the boundaries between work and leisure, between middle and working classes, and between public and private spaces.

Beside You in Time

Beside You in Time
Title Beside You in Time PDF eBook
Author Elizabeth Freeman
Publisher Duke University Press
Pages 158
Release 2019-09-06
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 147800567X

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In Beside You in Time Elizabeth Freeman expands biopolitical and queer theory by outlining a temporal view of the long nineteenth century. Drawing on Foucauldian notions of discipline as a regime that yoked the human body to time, Freeman shows how time became a social and sensory means by which people assembled into groups in ways that resisted disciplinary forces. She tracks temporalized bodies across many entangled regimes—religion, secularity, race, historiography, health, and sexuality—and examines how those bodies act in relation to those regimes. In analyses of the use of rhythmic dance by the Shakers; African American slave narratives; literature by Mark Twain, Pauline Hopkins, Herman Melville, and others; and how Catholic sacraments conjoined people across historical boundaries, Freeman makes the case for the body as an instrument of what she calls queer hypersociality. As a mode of being in which bodies are connected to others and their histories across and throughout time, queer hypersociality, Freeman contends, provides the means for subjugated bodies to escape disciplinary regimes of time and to create new social worlds.

Time: Sense, Space, Structure

Time: Sense, Space, Structure
Title Time: Sense, Space, Structure PDF eBook
Author
Publisher BRILL
Pages 472
Release 2016-05-09
Genre History
ISBN 9004312315

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The essays in this volume explore the nature of time, our God-given medium of ascent, known, as Augustine puts it, through the ordered study of the “liberal disciplines that carry the mind to the divine (disciplinae liberales intellectum efferunt ad divina)”: grammar and dialectic, for example, to promote thinking; geometry and astronomy to grasp the dimensions of our reality; music, an invisible substance like time itself, as an exemplary bridge to the unseen substance of thoughts, ideas, and the nature of God (theology). This ascending course of study rests on procedure, progress, and attainment — on before, following, and afterwards — whose goal is an ascending erudition that lets us finally contemplate, as Augustine says in De ordine, our invisible medium — time — within time itself: time is immaterial, but experienced as substantial. The essays here look at projects that chronicle time “from the beginning,” that clarify ideas of creation “in time” and “simultaneous times,” and the interrelationships between measured time and eternity, including “no-time.” Essays also examine time as revealed in social and political contexts, as told by clocks, as notated in music and embodied in memorializing stone. In the final essays of this volume, time is understood as the subject and medium of consciousness. As Adrian Bardon says, “time is not so much a ‘what’ as a ‘how’”: a solution to “organizing experience and modeling events.” Contributors are (in order within the volume) Jesse W. Torgerson, Ken A. Grant, Danielle B. Joyner, Nancy van Deusen, Peter Casarella, Aaron Canty, Jordan Kirk, Vera von der Osten-Sacken, Gerhard Jaritz, Jason Aleksander, Sara E. Melzer, Mark Howard, Andrew Eschelbacher, Hans J. Rindisbacher, James F. Knapp, Peggy A. Knapp, Raymond Knapp, Michael Cole, Ike Kamphof and Leonard Michael Koff.

The Secret Pulse of Time

The Secret Pulse of Time
Title The Secret Pulse of Time PDF eBook
Author Stefan Klein
Publisher Da Capo Lifelong Books
Pages 0
Release 2009-02-03
Genre Science
ISBN 9780738212562

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Popular science at its very best, The Secret Pulse of Time awakens us to and empowers us with the idea that time is far more at our disposal than we have previously realized. Award-winning journalist Stefan Klein— whose previous book, The Science of Happiness, is a longtime international bestseller—here provides what are essentially “operating instructions” for time. Through a combination of original investigation and reportage, personal revelation, and a commanding presentation of scientific research (among disciplines including brain physiology, social psychology, philosophy, and Einsteinian physics), The Secret Pulse of Time teaches readers not only to better master time but also to understand why they so often fail to do so.