About this item
Highlights
- The "meantime" represents the gap between what is past and the unknown future.
- About the Author: Deborah Durham teaches at the University of Virginia.
- 240 Pages
- Social Science, Anthropology
Description
Book Synopsis
The "meantime" represents the gap between what is past and the unknown future. When considered as waiting, the meantime is defined as a period of suspension to be endured. By contrast, the contributors of this volume understand it as a space of "the possible" where calculation coexists with uncertainty, promises with disappointment, and imminence with deferral. Attending to the temporalities of emerging rather than settled facts, they put the stress on the temporal tactics, social commitments, material connections, dispositional orientations, and affective circuits that emerge in the meantime even in the most desperate times.
Review Quotes
"[This volume] curates an extraordinary conversation about what it means to wait, seemingly without end, in a moment that is supposedly defined by instantaneity. The book's timing and its framing could not be better." - Bruce O'Neill, Saint Louis University
"This is a superb volume, on the subject of a particular temporal mode--what the editors call "the meantime"... this book is top-notch scholarship, on a cutting-edge subject that will make a significant contribution to not only anthropology but cognate fields." - Anne Allison, Duke University
About the Author
Deborah Durham teaches at the University of Virginia. She conducts research in Botswana and Turkey and is the co-editor of Generations and Globalization: Youth, Age, and Family in the New World Economy (Indiana, 2007) and Elusive Adulthoods: The Anthropology of New Maturities (Indiana, 2017). She is an Editor at Hau Books and is Deputy Editor for Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory.