2017
DOI: 10.14506/ca32.1.01
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Speed: An Introduction

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Cited by 54 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…This analysis thereby also poses a challenge to prevalent assumptions regarding digital immediacy as a one-directional speeding up of life through increasingly networked worlds, with information, connections and media always available through the tap of a keyboard or the swipe of a screen (Sprenger 2014). More nuanced accounts have emerged that provide scope to consider ways in which the digital may slow life down, to stabilise and calm (Wajcman 2015, Duclos et al 2017, Reading, 2012. These are important points in relation to analysing the meanings of 'crisis' that emerge through the immediacy of online support.…”
Section: Digital Immediacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This analysis thereby also poses a challenge to prevalent assumptions regarding digital immediacy as a one-directional speeding up of life through increasingly networked worlds, with information, connections and media always available through the tap of a keyboard or the swipe of a screen (Sprenger 2014). More nuanced accounts have emerged that provide scope to consider ways in which the digital may slow life down, to stabilise and calm (Wajcman 2015, Duclos et al 2017, Reading, 2012. These are important points in relation to analysing the meanings of 'crisis' that emerge through the immediacy of online support.…”
Section: Digital Immediacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their introduction to a Cultural Anthropology Openings and Retrospectives section on speed, Vincent Duclos, Tomás Sánchez Criado, and Vinh‐Kim Nguyen () assert that the world is accelerating and that anthropological engagements with speed as process (as opposed to static representations of cultural experiences of time) could spark new imaginative capacities toward more viable futures. This is not, they explain, about a faster anthropology, nor is it about producing accounts of how people experience speed.…”
Section: Temporality Mobility and Sovereigntymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Dr. Wu pointed out to me, the key challenge of his system is to devise a method of breeding the BSF that can yield a predictable quantity of flies throughout the changing lighting and temperature conditions of different seasons. Just as attention to the calibration of speed and the nature of circulation proves central to the configuration of production and consumption in late capitalism (Cowen 2014;Duclos, Sánchez Criado, and Nguyen 2017), to be adapted as a biotechnology and a waste infrastructure for cities, the speed and reliable reproduction of fly larvae must complement the predictable rate of human organic waste output.…”
Section: Producing Circularity Through Laboratory Workmentioning
confidence: 99%