TimeSpace: Geographies of TemporalityJon May, N. J. Thrift Timespace undermines the old certainties of time and space by arguing that these dimensions do not exist singly, but only as a hybrid process term. The issue of space has perhaps been over-emphasised and it is essential that processes of everyday existence, such as globalisation and environmental issues and also notions such as gender, race and ethnicity, are looked at with a balanced time-space analysis. |
Contents
PART I | 38 |
time space and the discourse | 49 |
A politics of stolen time 133 | 73 |
narratives of nationhood | 89 |
Reflections on time timespace compression | 106 |
reflections over timespace | 133 |
New landscapes of urban poverty management | 149 |
the spacetime of concepts | 171 |
temporalised space and motion | 187 |
Timegeography matters | 208 |
experience in sacred time and space | 226 |
Halfopened being | 240 |
a Buddhist perspective on the end | 262 |