Key Concepts

Time

Barbara Adam

Overview

What is time? How has our relationship to time changed through history and how does time structure our social lives?

In this lively introduction, Barbara Adam explores the changing ways in which time has been understood and how this knowledge is embedded in cultural practices. She takes the reader on a journey of discovery that extends from ancient mythology and classical philosophy to the contemporary social world of high-speed computer networks and globalized social relations. The book poses key questions about the nature of time, how it is conceptualized, what it means in practice and how the parameters set by nature have been transcended across the ages by the human quest for time know-how and control. It provides the reader with a good basis for understanding the role of time in contemporary social life.

This book assumes no previous knowledge. Through its broad perspective and transdisciplinary approach it provides an accessible and wide-ranging introduction for students and teachers across the social sciences.

About the Author

Barbara Adam is Professor at the School of Social Sciences, University of Cardiff.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgements
  • Prologue
  • PART I What is Time?
  • Interlude: Time Is
  • 1 Time Stories
  • Gods of Time
  • In the Beginning
  • Paradise and the Fall
  • Encounters with Death
  • Journeys to the Otherworld
  • Cycles of Renewal and Regeneration
  • Beyond Death: Resurrection and Redemption
  • Reflections: Myth for Today's Theory and Practice
  • Interlude: Representations of Time
  • 2 Time Theories I
  • Western Philosophy: From Ontology to Epistemology
  • Natural Science: Clockwork Universe and Change
  • Enlightenment Theories: A Priori and Dialectic
  • Social Theory: Practice, Value and Category
  • Interlude: Time Perspectives
  • 3 Time Theories II
  • Western Philosophy: Time Within
  • The Sciences of System-Specific Times
  • Social Theory and the Past, Present and Future
  • PART II What is the Role of Time in Social Life?
  • Interlude: Time Transcendence
  • 4 Cultural Practices of Time Transcendence
  • Making Time Stand Still
  • Knowing Fate, Forging Futures
  • Creating Immortality and Permanence
  • Modifying Nature's Times and Rhythms
  • Superimposing Phases and Social Structure
  • Interlude: Body Time, Clock Time, Social Time
  • 5 In Pursuit of Time Know-how
  • Reckoning Time
  • Creating Clock Time
  • Mobilising World Time
  • Networking Instantaneity
  • Interlude: Time Complexities & Hierarchies
  • 6 The Quest for Time Control
  • Commodification
  • Compressions
  • Colonization
  • Control
  • Interlude: Futures
  • Epilogue
  • Further Reading
  • Bibliography

Index

Endorsements

“This is a very wide-ranging and erudite examination of countless notions of time throughout history. Barbara Adam sets out a whole new agenda for “time” analysis.”

— John Urry, University of Lancaster

“In a book grounded in top-notch scholarship, Barbara Adam traces how time has been viewed and lived through history and civilisation.”

— Ronald Purser, San Francisco State University

Available titles

Sort by author | title

  1. Barbara Adam, Time
  2. Alan Aldridge, Consumption
  3. Alan Aldridge, The Market
  4. Jakob Arnoldi, Risk
  5. Colin Barnes and Geof Mercer, Disability
  6. Darin Barney, Network Society
  7. Mildred Blaxter, Health 2nd edition
  8. Harriet Bradley, Gender
  9. Harry Brighouse, Justice
  10. Mónica Brito Vieira and David Runciman, Representation
  11. Steve Bruce, Fundamentalism 2nd Edition
  12. Busfield, Mental Illness
  13. Margaret Canovan, The People
  14. Alejandro Colás, Empire
  15. Mary Daly, Welfare
  16. Anthony Elliott, Concepts of the Self 2nd Edition
  17. Steve Fenton, Ethnicity 2nd edition
  18. Katrin Flikschuh, Freedom
  19. Michael Freeman, Human Rights 2nd Edition
  20. Russell Hardin, Trust
  21. Geoffrey Ingham, Capitalism
  22. Fred Inglis, Culture
  23. Robert Jackson, Sovereignty
  24. Jennifer Jackson Preece, Minority Rights
  25. Gill Jones, Youth
  26. Paul Kelly, Liberalism
  27. Anne Mette Kjær, Governance
  28. Ruth Lister, Poverty
  29. Jon Mandle, Global Justice
  30. Anthony Payne and Nicola Phillips, Development
  31. Judith Phillips, Care
  32. Michael Saward, Democracy
  33. John Scott, Power
  34. Timothy Sinclair, Global Governance
  35. Anthony D. Smith, Nationalism 2nd Edition
  36. Deborah Stevenson, The City
  37. Stuart White, Equality
  38. Steven Vallas , Work
  1. Capitalism, Geoffrey Ingham
  2. Care, Judith Phillips
  3. Concepts of the Self 2nd Edition, Anthony Elliott
  4. Consumption, Alan Aldridge
  5. Culture, Fred Inglis
  6. Democracy, Michael Saward
  7. Development, Anthony Payne and Nicola Phillips
  8. Disability, Colin Barnes and Geof Mercer
  9. Empire, Alejandro Colás
  10. Welfare, Mary Daly
  11. Equality, Stuart White
  12. Ethnicity 2nd Edition, Steve Fenton
  13. Freedom, Katrin Flikschuh
  14. Fundamentalism 2nd Edition, Steve Bruce
  15. Gender 2nd Edition, Harriet Bradley
  16. Global Justice, Jon Mandle
  17. Global Governance, Timothy Sinclair
  18. Governance, Anne Mette Kjær
  19. Health 2nd Edition, Mildred Blaxter
  20. Human Rights, Michael Freeman
  21. Justice, Harry Brighouse
  22. Representation, Mónica Brito Vieira and David Runciman
  23. Liberalism, Paul Kelly
  24. The Market, Alan Aldridge
  25. Mental Ilness, Joan Busfield
  26. Minority Rights, Jennifer Jackson Preece
  27. Nationalism, Anthony D. Smith
  28. Network Society, Darin Barney
  29. The City, Deborah Stevenson
  30. The People, Margaret Canovan
  31. Poverty, Ruth Lister
  32. Power, John Scott
  33. Risk, Jakob Arnold
  34. Time, Barbara Adam
  35. Trust, Russell Hardin
  36. Work, Steven Vallas
  37. Youth, Gill Jones

 

Forthcoming titles

  1. Richard Bellamy, Constitutionalism
  2. Garrett Wallace Brown, Cosmopolitanism
  3. Craig Calhoun, Community
  4. Ben Colburn, Autonomy
  5. Keith Dowding, Rational Choice
  6. John Gearson, Terrorism
  7. James Gow, War
  8. Bob Jessop, The State
  9. Keith Krause, Security
  10. Chandran Kukathas, Multiculturalism
  11. Barbara Marshall, Sexuality
  12. Cillian McBride, Recognition
  13. Christopher Phillipson, Ageing
  14. Lord Raymond Plant, Citizenship
  15. Hilary Silver, Social Exclusion
  16. Leslie Thiele, Sustainability