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Chronotypes: The Construction of Time
 
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Chronotypes: The Construction of Time [Paperback]

John Bender (Editor), David Wellbery (Editor)


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Book Description

July 1, 1991
Time belongs to a handful of categories (like form, symbol, cause) that are genuinely transdisciplinary. Time touches every dimension of our being, every object of our attention -- including attention itself. It therefore can belong to no single field of study. Of course, this universalist view of time is not itself universal but rather is a product of the modern age, an age that conceived of itself as the "new" time. Time has thus gained new importance as a theme of general research with the "post-modern turn" now manifest in many areas of intellectual endeavor, especially in the humanities and social sciences.

"Chronotypes" are models or patterns through which time assumes practical or conceptual significance. Time is not given but (as the subtitle indicates) fabricated in an ongoing process. Chronotypes are themselves temporal and plural, constantly being made and remade at multiple individual, social, and cultural levels. They interact, they change over time, and they have histories, whose construal is itself an act of temporal construction.

This book -- an interdisciplinary collaboration of philosophers, historians, literary critics, and anthropologists -- examines the ways individuals, societies, and cultures make sense of time by constructing it in diverse patterns.


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 252 pages
  • Publisher: Stanford University Press; 1 edition (July 1, 1991)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0804719128
  • ISBN-13: 978-0804719124
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.6 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,807,534 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

John Bender is Jean G. and Morris M. Doyle Professor in Interdisciplinary Studies at Stanford University, in the Departments of English and Comparative Literature. He is author of Spenser and Literary Pictorialism, Imagining the Penitentiary: Fiction and the Architecture of Mind in Eighteenth Century England (which won the 1987 Gottschalk Prize for the best book on an 18th-century topic) and co-editor (with Simon Stern) of Tom Jones (Oxford, 1996), (with David Wellbery) of The Ends of Rhetoric: History, Theory, Practice and Chronotypes: The Construction of Time (Stanford, 1990 and 1991), and (with Michael Marrinan) of Regimes of Description: In the Archive of the Eighteenth Century (Stanford, 2005). The Culture of Diagram, co-authored with Michael Marrinan, is forthcoming from Stanford University Press in 2010.

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