This work brings together critical theorists, artists, and poets using time and temporality as the conceptual framework for investigating a diverse array of experiences and structures of oppression and exploitation in International Relations, focusing on the tensions produced by histories of slavery and colonization, disrupting dominant modes of understanding our present times.
Introduction. Of Time and Temporality in World Politics Anna M. Agathangelou and Kyle D. Killian Chapter 1. International Relations as a Vulnerable Space Anna M. Agathangelou and Kyle D. Killian Section 1. Contemporary Problematics: Tensions, Slavery, Colonization and Accumulation Chapter 2. Time, Technology, and the Imperial Eye Siba Grovogui Chapter 3. The Social Life of Social Death Jared Sexton Chapter 4. Time and Practices in Global Politics Ty Solomon Chapter 5. Doing Time in the (Psychic) Commons Frank B. Wilderson III Chapter 6. Outside of Time Wanda Nanibush Chapter 7. Impolitical Mandate Suvendrini Perera and Annette Seeman Chapter 8. The Productive Ambivalences of Post-Revolutionary Time Nasser Abourahme Section 2. Neoliberal Temporalities Chapter 9. Migrant Day Laborers, Neoliberal Temporality, and the Politics of Time Paul Apostolidis Chapter 10. Atemporal Dwelling: Heterotopias of Homelessness in Contemporary Japan Ritu Vij Chapter 11. Child's Play Andrew Hom and Brent J. Steele Chapter 12. Childhood, Redemption and the Prosaics of Waiting Sam Opondo Chapter 13. Temporality of Difference and In/Security Pinar Bilgin Chapter 14. Killing Time: Writing the Temporality of Global Politics Asli Çalkivik Chapter 15. Hurricane Katrina and Bio-Temporalities Michael Shapiro Chapter 16. Re-Imagining the Anonymous City Cliff Davidson Section 3. Poetic Interventions for Social Transformation Chapter 17. Freedom Telling on Time: The Arab Revolt's Poems Nathalie Handal Chapter 18. Blunt Balm Tsitsi Jaji Chapter 19. From the Bed & Breakfast Notebooks Alexandra Handal
Anna M. Agathangelou is Associate Professor in Political Science and Women's Studies at York University, Toronto, and co-director of Global Change Institute, Nicosia. Her academic interests include postcolonial and Marxist theory; transnational feminisms; critical theories of empire, colonization and slavery, race, sex and bodies; militarization of global relations; Marxist epistemologies and poetics of transformation.
Kyle D. Killian is a family therapist and Core Faculty in the Marriage and Family Therapy Program at Capella University. He has published on intercultural and interracial couples, refugee families, trauma, and self-care and vicarious resilience in helping professionals. A blogger at Psychology Today, Dr. Killian has developed measures of traumatic stress, critical thinking, cultural identity, vicarious resilience, and emotional intelligence.