The temporal diversity of our time. Pluralizing time and unlearning the modern Western temporal regime

The temporal diversity of our time. Pluralizing time and unlearning the modern Western temporal regime Worlding academic course entity: E7 Activity

Class E7 Activity is used here to model an educational course or programme which consists of many courses. The scope note of E7 Activity only references human actors. It is also implied that an instance of E7 Activity results in change. Some communities consider that change of an educational character occurs through intervention by non-human actors or non-living entities. An example is the educational programme of Devenir Universidad. This University is seen as a growing organism, a living collaborative assemblage of different actors. It is defined as a lifeline to the territory where entities like plants, animals, rivers, forests, mineral deposits and the weather have agency and play an active part. Also the friction between the passive and the active within a learning process as well as intentional and unintentional that exist in the idea of change are not fully unpacked in the scope note and examples. Therefore, the limitation of E7 Activity about change which is witnessed in a material sense, fails to capture inherent elements of an instance of E7 Activity such as passive contributions and intentionality in the learning process. The examples in the class description are largely from historiography in the West.

Course name(s)
The temporal diversity of our time. Pluralizing time and unlearning the modern Western temporal regime (appellation in English) Worlding appellation entity: E41 Appellation

Class E41 Appellation is used here to model names of things including places and people. The scope note of E41 Appellation explains that names are not considered as meaningful but as conventions. A name is used by convention even if there is a meaning attached to it. It is possible that names mentioned in the WPC database also hold a meaning which is significant for the thing they refer to as part of its identity. If this is the case, then this class and content type cannot capture that meaning.

Appellation
The temporal diversity of our time. Pluralizing time and unlearning the modern Western temporal regime
Language
English
Summary

Graduate seminar.

What are multiple concepts of time, plural and entangled temporal structures and regimes that constitute the present and our contemporary conceptual frameworks of knowing, being, creating art and cultural artifacts, and relating to each other and the world? This interdisciplinary seminar takes this question as the starting point to “unlearn” (G. Spivak) the universalized modern Western temporal framework and its ongoing effects on ways of knowing, being and creating and to explore the long ignored cultural and historical multiplicity of temporalities of the present through critical engagements with scholarly writings and art (visual art, film, music, literature etc.). The seminar takes the new critical attention to temporality and the heightened temporal and historical consciousness evident in current theoretical and artistic conceptualizations of what constitutes or could constitute our world temporally now and in the future as the starting point, to uncover, map and transform contemporary temporal frameworks and their effects on concepts and practices of knowledge, art, self and social relations.

Dates
Wed, 09/08/2021 - 00:00 - Fri, 12/10/2021 - 23:59
not before
not after
LocationWorlding database field "Location"

P7 took place atE53 Place: Class ‘E53 Place‘ is used to model a geographical place. Property ‘P7 took place at’ is used to model the fact that an educational course or exhibition took place at a location. ‘P7 took place at’ cannot convey the individual character that the course or exhibition may have because of the physical location that it is held. As such this property only describes the location in terms of plotting it on a map - which itself is a colonial practice. The property can also be used for online activities which take place simultaneously to the geographical places of all participants, however, this does not convey the significantly different type of interaction or the technological barriers for inclusion when one, for example, needs to be “present” at online meetings.

1125 Colonel By Dr Ottawa ON K1S 5B6 Canada Worlding place entity: E53 Place

Class E53 Place is used here to model geographical areas and locations. Mapping this content type to this class only models place based on the immaterial, mathematical area as defined with a frame of reference and as such it is not appropriate to express the physicality of space which is important. Also this class does not include temporality of places which is critical in a cultural context. A different model could make use of class ‘E27 Site’ which relates to the mathematical notion of E53 Places through property ‘P156 occupies’. That alternative solution is more complex but models place more accurately albeit using more than one class. Another problem with the concept of geometrical place is the fact that boundaries which do not exist in the physical world are needed to define it. This brings up questions around the agency of the people creating these boundaries, naming them and the problem of abstraction in maps which is reductive.

address

1125 Colonel By Dr
Ottawa ON K1S 5B6
Canada

geolocation

45.3834576, -75.6975055

Subject(s)
Critical contemporaneity
Pluriverse/Pluriversalität
Decoloniality
art history
global art history
transcultural historiography
Language
English
Style(s), period(s) or culture(s)
Global contemporary art
Global modernities