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DTSTART:19960101T000000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:GMT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0000 DTSTART:19961027T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260618T120720Z DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20140514T100000 DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20140514T160000 SUMMARY:Collaborative International PhD and Postdoc Workshop: University of warwick and University of Konstanz 14 May 2014 TZID:Europe/London UID:20140514-094d43d5447959990144891e8a001694@warwick.ac.uk CREATED:20140303T180443Z DESCRIPTION:International PHD and Postdoctoral Workshop: Living in a Cult ure of Immediacy: the Longing for Time in Contemporary Culture Date: 14 May: 10.00- 16 hours Place: 10-12: University of Konstanz\, room B602 13 .30-16.00: University of Konstanz\, K7 Workshop theme: Pubic debates abo ut the erosion of national sovereignty and of cultural identity in the d igital present are indicative of collective anxiety about our ability to plan the future and to maintain emotional and cultural attachment to th e past. The high speed created by the Information Age appears to challen ge not only established principles of democratic governance but also the very notion of a socially embedded temporality. J. Tomlinson speaks of a new “culture of immediacy” that strives to cancel the temporal gap bet ween the present and the future by way of “scripts of instant delivery” (Tomlinson 2007). The new cult of immediacy in Tomlinson’s sense thus re fers to a technologically enabled instantaneity. While advocates of such immediacy emphasize the liberating effect of new digital temporalities\ , critics worry about the negative effects of a “runaway world” (Giddens ) and a “timeless time” (M. Castells) that breaks down the social and bi ological rhythms of the life cycle. For H. U. Gumbrecht the digital era has undermined the experience of “real presence” by reducing our encount ers with the world to the level of simulacra without any experiential im prints. For the sociologist H. Rosa (2005\; 2012) high-speed modernity h as unhinged the prospect of maintaining meaningful relations between sel ves\, others and their human habitats. This tendency was already anticip ated in Koselleck’s famous definition of modern temporality in terms of an inexorable gap between the realm of experience (the past) and the hor izon of expectation (the future). Rosa argues that while in classical mo dernity the notion of a rational subjectivity still incorporated element s of a romantic self that bridged the Cartesian gap between reason and f eeling\, in late modernity human creativity has been entirely subjugated to the systemic requirements of accelerated capitalism. In his view hum an actors in the 21st century are reduced to building merely temporary i dentities from flexible elements that fragment subjectivity. Regardless of whether the effects of the digital age are discussed in terms of a sh rinking or burgeoning present\, the sociological and philosophical debat es sketched above diagnose a perplexing overturning of the modern experi ences of linear time. While the transformation of the public and private sphere in the digital era is undeniable\, we must be mindful of the fac t that temporality remains an embodied and socially embedded mode of exp erience that is not only shaped by technology but also by cultural and s ocial factors. Cyberspace and the culture of immediacy constitute genuin ely new arenas of social interaction\, but these do not inevitably signa l the end of social relations\, the flattening of time\, the erosion of presence or the end of memory. Workshop programme: 10-12 hours: presenta tion and discussion of select theoretical texts · Reinhart Koselleck\, C oncepts of Historical Time and Social Time’. In: The practice of Concept ual History: Timing History\, Spacing Concepts (Standford UP 2002)\, pp. 115-130. · John Tomlinson: The Culture of Speed: The Coming of Immediac y (Sage Publications\, 2007)\, chapter 4: The Condition of Immediacy\, p p. 72-94 · Jose van Dijck\, The Culture of connectivity (Oxford UP\, 201 3) Chapter 1: Engineering Sociality in a Culture of Connectivity\, pp. 3 -23. · Carmen Leccardi\, New Temporal Perspectives in the High-Speed Soc iety. In: Robert Hassan\, Ronald E Purser: 24/7: Time and Temporality in the Network Society (Stanford 2007)\, pp. 25-37. 13.30-16.00 Student pr esentations with discussion (15 minutes) on aspects of time in their own work: LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Conferences,German Studies,Research,Research seminars LAST-MODIFIED:20140303T180443Z ORGANIZER;CN=Frederik Frank Sterkenburgh: END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR