Looking forward, looking back

This paper surveys the disparate literatures on time, and the relative paucity of metaphors available (based on spatial analogues or mirroring past and future onto one another). Parallels between approaches to the past and future are considered and different intellectual traditions surveyed in futur...

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Huvudupphovsman: Zeitlyn, D
Materialtyp: Journal article
Språk:English
Publicerad: Routledge 2015
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author Zeitlyn, D
author_facet Zeitlyn, D
author_sort Zeitlyn, D
collection OXFORD
description This paper surveys the disparate literatures on time, and the relative paucity of metaphors available (based on spatial analogues or mirroring past and future onto one another). Parallels between approaches to the past and future are considered and different intellectual traditions surveyed in futurology, memory, history (chronotopes), archaeology and philosophy. Causation across time, how the past affects the present, how the future may affect present and the past are considered as ways of better understanding how tensed statements in time and of time are essential elements of history and of anthropology. Pluralizing is suggested as a positive step: we should be talking of pasts, futures and even of presents. This has consequences, for example, the Thin Red Line of actuality must be broadened to be perhaps the Thick Reddish Braid. As introduction to a special issue of <em>History and Anthropology</em> I consider the papers that follow and how they contribute to the theme.
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spelling oxford-uuid:09c9e5b3-0f0d-448e-a907-a68366ba152c2022-03-26T09:20:15ZLooking forward, looking backJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:09c9e5b3-0f0d-448e-a907-a68366ba152cEnglishORA DepositRoutledge2015Zeitlyn, DThis paper surveys the disparate literatures on time, and the relative paucity of metaphors available (based on spatial analogues or mirroring past and future onto one another). Parallels between approaches to the past and future are considered and different intellectual traditions surveyed in futurology, memory, history (chronotopes), archaeology and philosophy. Causation across time, how the past affects the present, how the future may affect present and the past are considered as ways of better understanding how tensed statements in time and of time are essential elements of history and of anthropology. Pluralizing is suggested as a positive step: we should be talking of pasts, futures and even of presents. This has consequences, for example, the Thin Red Line of actuality must be broadened to be perhaps the Thick Reddish Braid. As introduction to a special issue of <em>History and Anthropology</em> I consider the papers that follow and how they contribute to the theme.
spellingShingle Zeitlyn, D
Looking forward, looking back
title Looking forward, looking back
title_full Looking forward, looking back
title_fullStr Looking forward, looking back
title_full_unstemmed Looking forward, looking back
title_short Looking forward, looking back
title_sort looking forward looking back
work_keys_str_mv AT zeitlynd lookingforwardlookingback