Event details
Feb
13
Immediate Time
Immediate time is a category that recently seems to have attracted much attention. And, yet, what is it? This talk considers how an interest in “immediacy” developed in the eighteenth century as a solution to the challenge of grasping the intersections of time and timelessness. This challenge had often been tackled as a theological problem, but eighteenth-century thinkers also attended to it in aesthetic, moral, and political discourses. Artworks and philosophy rendered moments as absorptive durations at odds with common timekeeping. Moral treatises and novels explored a moral sense that may or may not operate instantaneously but always immerses in intensive durations. And political discussions speculated that our species’ fore-parents were immersed in presence, a prehistory that, these European conjectures contend, is approximated by indigenous peoples of remote lands. Far from doing away with mediation, these eighteenth-century engagements develop sophisticated and self-conscious narratives to mediate temporal experience.
Speakers
Amit Yahav, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.
Date
February 13, 2025Time
4:30 p.m.Location
Jones Hall, 100Audience
University Sponsors
Department of English