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Lifetimes: A Theory of Timescales and Life Forms

  • Edited by Helge Jordheim, Sine Halkjelsvik Bjordal

Published on May 21, 2026 by punctum books

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Pages
496 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-242-6 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-243-3 (PDF)
ISBN (EPUB)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-307-2 (EPUB)
LCCN
LCCN: 2026936832
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: HIS054000, TEC056000
Thema subject codes
THEMA: JBC, JBCT1, NHTB, PDX

At the beginning of the twenty-first century, many of our most well-known and dependable forms of keeping, managing, and representing time are losing their grasp on the real. Clocks cannot measure how societies speed up, or come to a standstill during crisis, modern historiography is unable to come up with meaningful narratives about mankind as the sixth extinction event, and calendars are insufficient as tools for societal and political change. Lifetimes: A Theory of Timescales and Life Forms presents an alternative framework for studying lives and times, and the relationships between them.

Building on post-war theories of history, as well as several historical sub-disciplines, such as cultural history, history of science, and medical history, Lifetimes integrates approaches from anthropology, game studies, cultural studies, literary studies, critical heritage studies, science & technology studies, and critical time studies. Times are understood as always existing in plural, as embodied and emergent—in things, in assemblages of things, and in the relations between things. Among them are the lives of humans, but also the lives of viruses, plants, animals, rocks, computers, nations, concepts, policies, technologies, infrastructures, etc.

Lifetimes explores theoretical foundations while at the same time developing them through case studies in individual chapters. The result is a bottom-up theory of temporal multiplicity, conceptually and theoretically open enough to be productive across various academic disciplines. Rather than discussing how different disciplines relate to time, the authors in this edited collection present a theoretically sustained, empirically diverse range of cases, in which times in plural become politically and historically salient. Out of these case studies a new theory emerges: a theory of lifetimes.

Contents

  1. Frontmatter

  2. Introduction: A Theory of Lifetimes

    Helge Jordheim, Sine Halkjelsvik Bjordal

  3. Melting Ice Rock: Cryolite Mining in Greenland, Past and Present

    Stine Alling Jacobsen

  4. The Extinction Event That Keeps on Taking Place: Vernacular Photography from Industrial Whaling

    Espen Ytreberg

  5. Loops and Timelines: Anthropocene Storytelling in Heaven’s Vault and Outer Wilds

    Laura op de Beke

  6. Times of Traffic Jams: Toward a New Diagram of Social Time

    Helge Jordheim

  7. Temporalities Out of Place: Social Entrainment in a Pandemic

    Einar Wigen

  8. The Timing of Milk

    Anne Kveim

  9. Making Progress Legible: Historicity and Materiality in the Nineteenth-Century Arabic Periodical

    Ingrid Eskild

  10. History on the Grid: Colonial Maps as Tools of Time, 1870–1910

    Leonoor Zuiderveen Borgesius

  11. On a Dais, in a Globe, Racing the Weather: Obscuring the Many Times of Climate Change

    Emil Flatø

  12. Assemblages versus Orders: Gilbert White’s Precise Lines in a Sensible World

    Erik Ljungberg

  13. Textualized Nature and the Temporal Nature of Texts: Basking Shark Temporalities in Eighteenth-Century Natural History Writing

    Sine Halkjelsvik Bjordal

  14. Fragile Knots of Time: Encountering the Bear Island

    Brita Brenna

  15. Timing Motherhood, Timing Writing: A Para-Academic Meditation on My Life and Time

    Rana Issa

  16. The Stone That Ran to Paris: Notes on Waiting (and Care)

    Hugo Reinert

  17. Afterword

    Geoffrey C. Bowker

  18. Backmatter

Biographies

  • Helge Jordheim

    (Editor) (opens in new tab)

    University of Oslo

    Helge Jordheim is Professor of Cultural History of Nature at the University of Oslo, where for the last decade or so he has directed research on the cultural history of time, chronopolitics, synchronization, theories of history, and historiography. His main areas are German and European cultural and intellectual history since the 17th century as well as theories and key concepts of the human sciences.

  • Sine Halkjelsvik Bjordal

    (Editor) (opens in new tab)

    University of Oslo

    Sine Halkjelsvik Bjordal is a postdoctoral researcher specializing in the history and practices of natural history. She is currently affiliated with the project “The Afterlives of Natural History” at the University of Oslo, where she focuses on the practices of natural history writing, as well as on how the field of natural history developed after the 18th century. Her research interests include 18th- and 19th-century history of knowledge, heritage studies, literary theory, and rhetoric.

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Genres

  • Anthropocene
  • Biosphere
  • Cultural Studies+Critical Theory

Keywords

  • history of knowledge
  • history of media
  • infrastructures
  • naturecultures
  • technosciences
  • temporalities
  • times