Thematic Field: Social and Political Theory
WorkgroupStudies on time and temporalities
Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Sciences and Humanities
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Latin American Strategic Center for Geopolitics
Ecuador
Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Sciences and Humanities
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Currently, various academic, intellectual, and political circles often point out that we are living through a temporary crisis. We are at a moment in history where past and future become blurred when it comes to guiding our present. It is a time of crisis for utopias, but also of questioning the frameworks of memory upon which definitions of collective identities are based, identities that guide our shared experiences and practices. Short-termism in politics and economics, the absence of long-term social projects, as well as widespread pessimism about the future and the discrediting of experience, result in a present-day political action that seems focused on managing immediate needs.
Although essentially metropolitan, this diagnosis resonates with Latin American reality. What possible futures does the new wave of progressive governments in the region offer? What alternative future does our region offer in the face of global dystopias? How does the memory of our shared pasts connect us in present practices? What is the relevance of our pasts in the ways we imagine our shared future?
Those of us who have come together in this working group recognize our contemporary world as marked by a temporal crisis. However, we also recognize that the diagnosis outlined above is inherently general, a reading of reality that, in its general truth, obliterates many other realities. In Latin America and the Caribbean, the frameworks of thought of diverse communities, as well as the temporal orientations and political practices of various social movements and political projects, offer other ways of conceptualizing time and articulating the past with the present, opening up horizons of the future in which the future appears as a contest, not a verdict.
We recognize that the duty of critical thought is to identify and examine the dominant reality, and we agree on the notion of a crisis of temporality as a defining element of our global contemporaneity. However, we also believe that it is the duty of critical thought to expose the structures of domination, revealing their contingency and thus demystifying reality as the only reality, in order to make it possible to visualize the possibilities that emerge from the force of the dominant reality. This allows us to question reality and glimpse other possible realities, or in Freirean terms, to go beyond "limit situations" to recognize "the viable unprecedented" (Freire 2011; 2012). In other words, faced with the shared diagnosis of a present that ignores its formative pasts and blocks alternative futures, we recognize the existence of multiple other alternatives that, from Latin America and the Caribbean, articulate other ways of thinking, speaking, and doing time. We believe that these temporary alternatives, both present and past, should be studied and visualized as possibilities with the potential to transform the present time towards other possible futures.
Freire, P. (2011) Pedagogy of Hope. Mexico: Siglo XXI España.
This working group focuses on the study of time and temporalities from a Latin American perspective. We recognize time as a constitutive dimension of communal life that deserves to be reflected upon from different perspectives and considerations. In the disputes over how to understand, conceptualize, and define time, one can discern multiple struggles for hegemony and control over people's lives and natural environments. To control the time of others is to control their lives, to frame their projects, to structure their trajectories (Auyero, 2013). The politics of time, or chronopolitics, from which the temporal regimes that guide communal life are defined, are also spaces of dispute because they define collective dispositions toward change and/or the continuity of systems of domination and exploitation. The opening or closing of future horizons is contested and seeks resolution within these chronopolitics.
Similarly, we recognize temporality as one of the central categories upon which social and cultural differences are constructed. We seek to explore how temporal relations are marked by complex entanglements between policies, practices, and temporal imaginaries that arise from a series of contexts: the homogenizing impact of globalized time, the long duration of coloniality, the persistence of Indigenous temporal cultures, and the crisis of modern futures. Temporality is not understood here as an objective fact nor as a category of human consciousness; rather, we understand it as a product of multiple social and cultural practices and limitations (Valencia, 2018). Hence, we propose to explore multiple temporalities, or what Latin American social theory has defined from various perspectives as variegated times, the time of the multisocietal, multitemporal heterogeneity, temporal entanglements, border and mestizo times, ch'ixi temporality, and so on. (Anzaldúa, 1987; Ávila, 2014; 2018; Canclini, 1989; Resende and Thies, 2017; Rivera, 2018; Tapia, 2002; Valencia, 2010; 2012; Zavaleta, 1977; 2008)
We seek to investigate three areas that will bring us closer to the multiple ways of thinking about, speaking about, and experiencing time in Latin America. The first of these concerns the study of temporality in the Latin American debate on ideas. In Latin America, time has been the warp and weft of social thought in its most diverse traditions and projects. Time appears most often explicitly, but it is also present in implicit forms, which is why it is necessary to uncover the discussion surrounding time that has taken place in Latin America when contesting the meaning of its history. Within this framework, it is necessary to propose dialogue exercises that enable the synthesis and organization of these discussions.
The second line of research concerns the development of a counterfactual theory for the good life (Ramírez, 2022). If every social order implies a particular temporal order, every utopia implies a unique counterfactual. This line of research seeks to theorize about the concept of counterfactual, which has emerged from democratic processes taking place in Latin America in the new millennium. Counterfactual is understood as "no time," insofar as it implies a desired (and possible) social struggle that has been historically and geographically posed and that seeks to be achieved (the society of good living, living life to the fullest), for which a new temporal order must be constructed. The research begins with an analysis of specific historical struggles in the region that have sought to construct new utopias in order to investigate the temporalities inherent in such societal proposals. For the aforementioned concept of counterfactual, historical revisionism and its narratives are important insofar as they serve to politically contest the desired utopia/counterfactual. This line of research proposes to move towards the construction of an alternate history theory for the good life as a conceptual framework for critical/utopian analysis with a clear epistemic intention: to serve as a conceptual tool for exploring new alternate history futures that are currently being contested in the region. The discussion of alternate history theory will be a means to investigate a new theory of value centered on (good) lives, allowing for reflection, evaluation, and the formulation of guidelines for the construction of new theories of social justice. The research includes a debate on chronopolitics for the construction of other possible social alternate histories.
Finally, the third point refers to the ethnographic study of humble dreams (Contreras, 2022). These dreams, as situated notions of the future, are nourished by diverse, heterogeneous, and often incoherent horizons. They are futures that are temporally sedimented from dissimilar, often opposing, voices that intervene in the local construction of meaning. We can think of these interventions as conversations, around which "local models" are configured; in our case, the models or ideas of imagining the future. These local conversations occur within the context of other dominant, structural, and general conversations. What is investigated at this point, then, are the local articulations with these central or dominant conversations, including the inscriptions of the past and the practices of the present, between the central text and the marginal voices. In this sense, the conversations that configure the local are made up of contact and what has been defined as the work of imagination that constructs the local from diverse articulations of ways of being, doing, and imagining reality. Humble dreams, which also emerge from people's capacity for reflection when evaluating their circumstances, constitute that local model of an imagined future. This model arises from diverse and historically situated conversations that construct meaning and enable people to imagine other possible lives and commit to them from the perspective of their present practices. These practices stem from the urgency of earning a living and, at the same time, make life and its continuity possible.
Anzaldúa, G. (1987) Borderlands / La frontera: The New Mestiza San Francisco: Aunt Lute Books.
Ávila, E. (2018). Temporal Borderlands: Toward Decolonial Queer Temporality in Latinx Literature. In J. Morán González & L. Lomas (Eds.), The Cambridge History of Latina/o American Literature (pp. 711-736). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ávila, E. (2014) “Decolonizing Straight Temporality through Genre Trouble in Edwidge Danticat's The Farming of Bones.” Ilha do Desterro 67, 21-36.
Auyero, J. (2013). State Patients. Buenos Aires: Eudeba.
Canclini, Nestor (1989). Hybrid cultures. Sao Paulo: Edusp.
Contreras, Raúl (2022). Imagining futures. The temporality of earning a living in the Mezquital Valley, Mexico: CEIICH-UNAM.
Resende, F. and Thies, S. (2017) “Entangled temporalities in the Global South”. Contracampo – Brazilian Journal of Communication (UFF), Institute of Arts and Communication, Niterói, v. 36, no. 3, p. 2-14.
Rivera Cusicanqui, S. (2018). A ch'ixi world is possible. Essays from a present in crisis. Buenos Aires: Tinta limón.
Tapia, L. (2002) The multisocietal condition: multiculturalism, pluralism, modernity. La Paz: Muela del Diablo.
Valencia, G. (2010). Mexican Times. Madrid: Sequitur.
Valencia, G. (2012). “Contemporary Life Interrogated.” In: J. Gandarilla, R. Ramos, and G. Valencia
(coords.). Contemporaneity(ies). Madrid: Sequitur.
Valencia, G. (2018). Between Chronos and Kairos: the forms of sociohistorical time. Mexico: National Autonomous University of Mexico, Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Sciences and Humanities.
Zavaleta, R. (1977) “General considerations on the history of Bolivia (1932 – 1971)”. In Complete Works. Volume III. Part II. Other writings, 1954 – 1984. La Paz: Plural Editores.
(Articulation actions for relevant and rigorous comparative social research)
- To analyze and investigate the theoretical, methodological, philosophical and conceptual problems that arise from the study and reflection on time.
- Coordinate the publication of academic texts.
- Management of the participation of speakers invited to the seminar.
- Conducting the monthly sessions of the Seminar on Time Studies (CEIICH and FCPyS of the UNAM).
- Coordination and participation in the Annual Meeting of the Working Group on Studies of Time and Temporalities.
- Collaboration in the publication of a Handbook on temporalities, under the editorial seal of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Global South Studies, University of Tübingen, Germany.
(Actions for training, visibility and communication of production)
- Coordinate academic activities that promote interdisciplinary dialogue and citizen participation.
- Organization of national and international academic activities.
- Presentation of the book "Sharing Time. Untimely Reflections", under the FCPyS-UNAM publishing label.
- Presentation of the book "Futures in Dispute: Narratives about the future" under the CEIICH-UNAM publishing label.
- Coordination of a Tribute to Dr. Ramón Ramos Torre (Complutense University of Madrid).
(Relationships with science and technology organizations, non-governmental organizations, trade unions, social movements, etc.)
- Infographic creation
- Organizing talks.
- Infographic about time: "Is time yours or is time yours?"
- Dissemination of publications.
(Scientific networks, international cooperation organizations, academic institutions)
- Strengthen networks with other active CLACSO Working Groups.
(Articulation actions for relevant and rigorous comparative social research)
- To analyze and investigate the theoretical, methodological, philosophical and conceptual problems that arise from the study and reflection on time.
- Coordinate the publication of academic texts.
- Development of methodological strategies for
the study of time.
- Management of the participation of speakers invited to the seminar.
- Conducting the monthly sessions of the Seminar on Time Studies (CEIICH and FCPyS of the UNAM).
- Participation in methodological debates.
- Coordination and participation in the Annual Meeting of the Working Group on Studies of Time and Temporalities.
- Group and individual publications.
(Actions for training, visibility and communication of production)
- Coordinate academic activities that promote interdisciplinary dialogue and citizen participation.
- To assist in the organization of academic activities that link the seminar with other spaces for academic exchange.
- Participation of GT members in national and international academic events.
- Monitoring the design of the interactive platform around "The Voices of Time. Dictionary of Quotes".
- Interactive platform around "The Voices of Time. Dictionary of Quotes" (CEIICH-UNAM)
(Relationships with science and technology organizations, non-governmental organizations, trade unions, social movements, etc.)
- Design and implementation of an educational workshop.
- Organizing talks.
- Workshop on the uses of time.
- Dissemination of publications.
(Scientific networks, international cooperation organizations, academic institutions)
- Strengthen networks with other active CLACSO Working Groups.
(Articulation actions for relevant and rigorous comparative social research)
- To analyze and investigate the theoretical, methodological, philosophical and conceptual problems that arise from the study and reflection on time.
- Coordinate the publication of academic texts.
- Development of methodological strategies for
the study of time.
- Management of the participation of speakers invited to the seminar.
- Conducting the monthly sessions of the Seminar on Time Studies (CEIICH and FCPyS of the UNAM).
- Participation in methodological debates.
5. Coordination and participation in the last Annual Meeting of the Working Group on Studies of Time and Temporalities.
- Group and individual publications.
(Actions for training, visibility and communication of production)
- Coordinate academic activities that promote interdisciplinary dialogue and citizen participation.
- Participation of GT members in national and international academic events.
- Monitoring the design of the interactive platform around "The Voices of Time. Dictionary of Quotes"
- Interactive platform around "The Voices of Time. Dictionary of Quotes", (CEIICH-UNAM)
(Relationships with science and technology organizations, non-governmental organizations, trade unions, social movements, etc.)
- Conducting interviews with specialists and those interested in the topic.
- Organizing talks.
-Interviews that are broadcast through social media, television and radio.
-Dissemination of publications and content.
(Scientific networks, international cooperation organizations, academic institutions)
- Strengthen networks with other active CLACSO Working Groups.
Total number of researchers admitted: 33
Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen
Germany,
Universidad de Chile
Chile
Coordination of Humanities, UNAM
Mexico
Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Academic Unit in Development Studies
Autonomous University of Zacatecas
Mexico
Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences, Argentina
Argentina Program
Argentina
University of Buenos Aires
Argentina
Catholic University of Chile
Chile
Departments of Social Sciences and Humanities - UCA
Centroamerican University
El Salvador
Institute of Contemporary History
Faculty of Social and Human Sciences
Nova University of Lisbon and University of Évora
Portugal
New University of Lisbon
Portugal
Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Sciences and Humanities
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
UNVM
Argentina
Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen
Germany,
University Studies Program on Democracy, Justice and Society (UNAM)
Mexico
Latin American Strategic Center for Geopolitics
Ecuador
Global Studies Center – Universidade Aberta
Portugal
Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Sciences and Humanities
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Academic Unit in Development Studies
Autonomous University of Zacatecas
Mexico
Autonomous University of Mexico City
Academic coordination
Autonomous University of Mexico City
Mexico
University of the Valley of Mexico
Mexico
Autonomous Metropolitan University Xochimilco
Mexico
Faculty of Social Sciences
Directorate of Research and Postgraduate Studies
Alberto Hurtado University
Chile
Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Coordination of Humanities, UNAM
Mexico
Postgraduate Directorate
UTE University
Ecuador
Autonomous Metropolitan University Azcapotzalco
Mexico
Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen
Germany,
University of Los Lagos
Chile