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The power of time: Temporal experiences and a-temporal thinking?

In Christina Schües, Dorothea E. Olkowski & Helen A. Fielding (eds.), Time in Feminist Phenomenology. Indiana University Press. pp. 60 (2011)

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  1. Die Zeitsensibilität der Menschen und die Zeitregime des Alterns.Christina Schües - 2014 - Zeitschrift für Praktische Philosophie 1 (1):289-326.
    Menschen sind zeitsensibel. Ihr Fühlen, Erleben, Wollen und Handeln ist zeitlich strukturiert und bestimmt. Zeitregime beeinflussen und beherrschen durch ihre imperative Apodiktizität, Homogenität, Durchsetzungskraft und Geschwindigkeit die historische, kulturelle und gesellschaftliche Ordnung des Lebens und die Erfahrungen der Menschen. Aber nicht jede Lebensphase ist gleichermaßen in die jeweilige Ordnung und Gestaltung des herrschenden Zeitregimes eingebunden, wie am Beispiel des Alters gezeigt werden kann. Der folgende Beitrag richtet einen phänomenologischen und kulturtheoretischen Blick auf die modernen und spätmodernen Zeitregime des Alters. Diese (...)
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  • Gender as Lived Time: Reading The Second Sex for a Feminist Phenomenology of Temporality.Megan M. Burke - 2018 - Hypatia 33 (1):111-127.
    This article suggests that Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex offers an important contribution to a feminist phenomenology of temporality. In contrast to readings of The Second Sex that focus on the notion of “becoming” as the main claim about the relation between “woman” and time, this article suggests that Beauvoir's discussion of temporality in volume II of The Second Sex shows that Beauvoir understands the temporality of waiting, or a passive present, to be an underlying structure of women's existence (...)
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  • Distending Straight‐Masculine Time: A Phenomenology of the Disabled Speaking Body.Joshua St Pierre - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (1):49-65.
    Drawing upon feminist, queer, and crip phenomenology, this essay argues that the distinct temporality of the lived, stuttering body disturbs the normalized “choreography” of communication and thereby threatens the disabled speaker's recognition as a speaking subject. Examined through the phenomenology of Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Alfred Schutz, the disabled speaking body is temporally “out of step” with the normalized bodily rhythms and pace of communicative practices in relation to both lived and objective time. Disciplined for his incalculable and therefore irrational bodily (...)
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  • Superwomen? Young sporting women, temporality, and learning not to be perfect.Noora Ronkainen, Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson, Kenneth Aggerholm & Tatiana Ryba - 2020 - International Review for the Sociology of Sport (1).
    New forms of neoliberal femininity create demanding horizons of expectation for young women. For talented athletes, these pressures are intensified by the establishment of dual-career discourses that construct the combination of high-performance sport and education as a normative, ‘ideal’ pathway. The pressed time perspective inherent in dual-careers requires athletes to employ a variety of time-related skills, especially for young women who aim to live up to ‘superwoman’ ideals that valorize ‘success’ in all walks of life. Drawing on existential phenomenology, and (...)
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