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European Journal of Social Theory
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Reconsidering National Temporalities

Institutional Times, Everyday Routines, Serial Spaces and Synchronicities

Tim Edensor

Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

This article attempts to foreground the importance of everyday life and habit to the reproduction of national identities. Taking issue with dominant linear depictions of the time of the nation, which have over-emphasized ‘official’ histories, tradition and heroic narratives, this article foregrounds the everyday rhythms through which a sense of national belonging is sustained. The article focuses upon institutionalized schedules, habitual routines, collective synchronicities and serialized time-spaces to develop an argument that quotidian, cyclical time is integral to national identity. In conclusion, accounts that discuss the increasing dominance of a postmodern global time are argued to be hyperbolic, since the nation remains a powerful, if more flexible constituent of identity.

Key Words: everyday life • habit • national identity • synchronicity • time

European Journal of Social Theory, Vol. 9, No. 4, 525-545 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1368431006071996


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