Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,585,952 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Boo to Captain Clock: Jay Griffiths sides with the agitators and celebrants who subvert the regulation of time by potentates and pencil-pushers. (Taking Back Our Time).


'We do not recognize history, patriarchy, matriarchy matriarchy, familial and political rule by women. Many contemporary anthropologists reject the claims of J. J. Bachofen and Lewis Morgan that early societies were matriarchal, although some contemporary feminist theory has suggested that a primitive matriarchy did ... or lollipop men/ladies... Our currency is to be based on the quag barter system. We do not recognize the Gregorian calendar: this day shall be known as One...' Thus spake spake  
v. Archaic
A past tense of speak.


spake
Verb

Archaic a past tense of speak
 British road protesters in a 1995 manifesto.

The clock and calendar have long been a locus for power struggles. Potentates, princes and priests, hypnotized by hopes of hegemony, have always stood on the borders of space and looked at time -- for time is a kingdom, a power and a glory. When the ancient Chinese empire colonized Colonized
This occurs when a microorganism is found on or in a person without causing a disease.

Mentioned in: Isolation
 some new territory, the people of that region were sinisterly said to have 'received the calendar'. Pol Pot declared 1975 Year Zero in Cambodia. Mayan priests in Central America gained their power over people through accurate knowledge of time. In 1370, Charles V of France Charles V (21 January 1338 – 16 September 1380), called the Wise, was King of France from 1364 to his death and a member of the House of Valois. His reign marked a high point for France during the Hundred Years' War, with his armies recovering much of the territory  gave an order that all clocks were to be set by the magnificent clock in his palace; he was the ruler of the land and now would be ruler of time. But wherever there are clock rulers, there are clock rebels, and in the French Revolution, Charles V's clock was severely damaged in an act of articulate vandalism. A new time-measurement was announced: 1792 became Year One.

The Benedictine monasteries began scheduling time and ringing bells through the night in the sixth century, controlling and ordering time according to Christian dictat. The Industrial Revolution created time-owners; the capitalist factory bosses, erecting clock-bound fences of work-time and the sense that employers owned the time of their employees, enslaving their time, enclosing it. Stealthily stealth·y  
adj. stealth·i·er, stealth·i·est
Marked by or acting with quiet, caution, and secrecy intended to avoid notice. See Synonyms at secret.
, nastily, one type of time has grown horribly dominant: Western, Christian, linear, abstract, clock-dominated, work-oriented, coercive, capitalist, masculine and anti-natural: Hegemonic Time. This time, and all the time-values which go with it, have been imposed on numerous cultures across the world. (When missionaries arrived the Algonquin people of North America called clock-time 'Captain Clock' because it seemed to command every act for the Christians.)

There is revolt. The challenge to He gemonic Time has come from the radiant variety of times understood by indigenous peoples; from self-conscious political protest; from children's dogged insistence on living in a stretchy stretch·y  
adj. stretch·i·er, stretch·i·est
1. Capable of being stretched: a stretchy fabric.

2. Tending to stretch excessively.

Adj. 1.
 eternity; from women's blood and from carnival.

Subversive and mischievous, carnival reverses the norms, overturns the usual hierarchies. Unlike Hegemonic Time, carnival is usually tied to nature's time; it is ahistoric, linked to cyclic, frequently seasonal events. Carnival transforms work-time to playtime, reverses the status quo. It is frequently earthy and sexual. The Puritans hated that, outlawing May Day and other festivals. Carnival also emphasizes commonality; customs of common time celebrated by common people on common land. In Britain, a huge number of these customs disappeared as a result of enclosures: when rights to common land were lost, so were the rites. Carnival is vulgar: of the common people. And it is vulgar in another sense: drunken, licentious li·cen·tious  
adj.
1. Lacking moral discipline or ignoring legal restraint, especially in sexual conduct.

2. Having no regard for accepted rules or standards.
, loud and lewd; from May Day's Green Man's Horn, to apple-tree wassailing Wassailing is the practice of going door-to-door singing Christmas carols and requesting in return wassail or some other form of refreshment. In modern times it is most commonly known through reference in various traditional Christmas carols (e.g. . Just as land was literally fenced off -- enclosed -- so the spirit of carnival -- broad, unfettered, unbounded exuberance -- was metaphorically enclosed.

But carnival erupts, the deliberate use of carnivalesque costume amongst global-justice protesters of today, for example, in Seattle, Gothenburg, London, Genoa, seriously playing out the politics of carnival -- and indeed the politics of anti-enclosure.

Workers in Britain in the 1820s and 1830s smashed the clocks above the factory gates in protest at the theft of their time. Trade unions took on first the abuse of time, seeking shorter working hours. British workers staunchly persisted in honouring 'Saint Monday' and French workers 'Saint-Lundi' (in effect the patron saint of hangovers). Protest continued, from the 1960s' revolt against work, the refusal to wear watches, the slogan 'Work less, Live more!' to today's 'Downshifters'.

Play, that subversive beastie beast·ie  
n. Informal
A small animal.
, anarchic, energetic and creative, is still hated by modern-day Puritans of corporate capitalism. All over the world, colonization included insistence on work time: Columbus, on first meeting the Tainos people of San Salvador, was convinced that they should be 'made to work, sow and do all that is necessary and to adopt our ways...' The Inuit in Canada refer to themselves as 'rich in knowledge, meat and time'. Anthropologists have recently begun referring to hunting and gathering people as 'the original affluent society' in that the pleasures and necessities of life could be secured with minimum work.

One of the most tenacious conceptual threats to work, and to Captain Clock's Hegemonic Time, is childhood itself. Children have a dogged, delicious disrespect for worktime, punctuality Punctuality
Fogg, Phileas

completes world circuit at exact minute he wagered he would. [Fr. Lit.: Around the World in Eighty Days]

Gilbreths

disciplined family brought up to abide by strict, punctual standards. [Am. Lit.
, efficiency and for schooled uniform time. Their time is an eternal present. They live (given half a chance) pre-industrially, in tutti-frutti time, roundabout time, playtime; staunch defenders of the ludic lu·dic  
adj.
Of or relating to play or playfulness: "Fiction . . . now makes [language]
 revolution, their hours are stretchy, ribboned, enchanted en·chant  
tr.v. en·chant·ed, en·chant·ing, en·chants
1. To cast a spell over; bewitch.

2. To attract and delight; entrance. See Synonyms at charm.
 and wild: which is why adults want to tame their time so ferociously, making them clock-trained, teaching them time-measurement as if they were concrete fact. The school clock is pointed to as the ultimate authority which even the Head obeys.

The exterior public clock and calendar of Hegemonic Time is white, clean, regular, predictable, objective, linear, homogenous homogenous - homogeneous  and male. I'm not. No woman is. It's in the blood, the inner, private, idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
, cyclical time; red, staining, alternating between ovulation ovulation /ovu·la·tion/ (ov?u-la´shun) the discharge of a secondary oocyte from a graafian follicle.ov´ulatory

o·vu·la·tion
n.
The discharge of an ovum from the ovary.
 and menstruation. Masculine society places a high value on people being the same over time, being reliable. But women (notoriously) are creatures of change. I'd gleefully glee·ful  
adj.
Full of jubilant delight; joyful.



gleeful·ly adv.

glee
 say mea culpa to the charge. When I'm ovulating, I'm not the same as when I'm premenstrual premenstrual /pre·men·stru·al/ (pre-men´stroo-al) occurring before menstruation.

pre·men·stru·al
adj.
Of or occurring in the period just before menstruation.
. At one pole I may well be co-operative, relaxed and nice. At the other, I will be intense, difficult, powerful and unpredictable. Probably. Menstruation gives women an experience of time which inherently subverts Hegemonic Time. Masculine society seeks to deny or penalize this time, to mock or scorn or (at best) ignore it. But this is when many women find their power, veering off at a subversive angle from the objective, public line of time. Menstrual absenteeism, deplored by many em ployers, is rightly relished by many women, for these days are quintessentially her own and do not belong to another.

Many cultures have cyclical ideas of time, essentially opposed to linear time (which, for all its dominance today, is an extremely recent concept). Among the Inuit of Baffin Island, the term Uvatiarru means both 'long ago in the past' and 'far ahead in the future'. In Hindu thought, time moves in the unimaginably long cycles of the Kalpas.

Opposition to Hegemonic Time is also found in moral values attributed to aspects of time: for example, speed. Although considered a virtue in itself by Westernized west·ern·ize  
tr.v. west·ern·ized, west·ern·iz·ing, west·ern·iz·es
To convert to the customs of Western civilization.



west
 cultures, speed is immoral to many others. To the Kabyle people of Algeria speed is considered both indecorous and demonically over-competitive. (The Kabyle refer to the clock as the 'devil's mill'.) In Brazil, the Xavante people have a ritual which involves two groups carrying two heavy logs, looking, to Western eyes, much like a race: however, if one group falls behind, the other will slow down for them. To ask who 'won' is a baffling baf·fle  
tr.v. baf·fled, baf·fling, baf·fles
1. To frustrate or check (a person) as by confusing or perplexing; stymie.

2. To impede the force or movement of.

n.
1.
 question to the Xavante; for this is not a race but an act of beauty.

Slowing down is catching on in the West as well. In France there is the anti-car newsletter Moins Vite!, in Italy a Campaign for Slow Food, and in Austria an Association for the Deceleration deceleration /de·cel·er·a·tion/ (de-sel?er-a´shun) decrease in rate or speed.

early deceleration
 of Time. Politically subversive singer Manu Chao's CD Esperanza notes: 'Este CD nacio de muchos trabajos, viajes, porros y encuentros. Nacio sin prisas... (porque las prisas matan).' 'This CD was born of much work, many journeys, spliffs and meetings. It was born without hurry, (because speed kills).'

Gutenberg's printing press printed calendars before bibles; Hegemonic Time was mass-produced to go global. In one of the most pernicious lies in history, the Christian calendar and the clock of capitalism insisted that they represented time itself. But the clock is not a synonym for time, it is an opposite of time. The Christian calendar (abstract, numerical and inherently political) has been used to deny the plurality of calendars across the world. Time itself, sensuous, poetic and diverse, is not found in it. The leaders of the Zapatistas insisted their time was not the time of the Westernized Mexican Government. The Zapatistas took their orders from the peasants, and this was a very slow and unscheduled process. 'We use time, not the clock. That is what the Government doesn't understand.' Subcomandante Marcos, in March 2001 in Mexico City spoke to thousands: 'Tlahuica. We walk time... Zoque. We carry much time in our hands.'

Among many peoples, timing involves spontaneity rather than scheduling, sensitivity to a quality of time which is unclockable. The San Bushmen of the Kalahari do not plan when to hunt, but rather 'wait for the moment to be lucky', reading and assessing animal patterns, looking for the 'right' time. Timing for many indigenous peoples is variable and indeterminate, optional and unpredictable. Time is a subtle element where creativity and improvization, flexibility, fluidity and responsiveness can flourish.

What subverts the dead hand of the dominant clock? Life itself. The elastic, chancy chanc·y  
adj. chanc·i·er, chanc·i·est
1. Uncertain as to outcome; risky; hazardous.

2. Random; haphazard.

3. Scots Lucky; propitious.
, sensitive times chosen for hunting depend on living things: how the living moment smells. There is a 'biodiversity of time' imaged in cultures around the world, time as a lived process of nature. There is a scent-calendar in the Andaman forests, star-diaries for the Kiwi peoples of New Guinea and Aboriginal Australians who begin the cultivation season when the Pleiades appear. One indigenous group in Madagascar refers to a moment as in the frying of a locust'. The English language still remembers time intrinsically connected to nature, doing something 'in two shakes of a lamb's tail' or the (arbitrary and sadly obsolete) phrase 'pissing-whille'.

Time in the past, too, 'dead and buried' under Western eyes Under Western Eyes (1911) is a novel by Joseph Conrad. The novel takes place in St. Petersburg, Russia and Geneva, Switzerland and is viewed as Conrad's response to the themes explored in Crime and Punishment; Conrad being reputed to detest Dosteovsky. , shimmers with life to many other cultures: the Australian Aboriginal dreamtime dream·time also Dream·time  
n.
The time of the creation of the world in Australian Aboriginal mythology: "Aboriginal myths tell of the legendary totemic beings who wandered across the country in the Dreamtime . . .
 ancestors 'live' in spite of death: they disappeared, but did not die. Interestingly, many areas rich in myth and indigenous history are shown to be places of high biodiversity; living history, life at its liveliest.

For time is not found in dead clocks and inert calendars, time is life itself: in ocean tides and the blood in the womb, in every self-respecting child, in the land itself, in every spirited protest for diversity and every refusal to let another enslave en·slave  
tr.v. en·slaved, en·slav·ing, en·slaves
To make into or as if into a slave.



en·slavement n.
 your time, in the effervescent ef·fer·vesce  
intr.v. ef·fer·vesced, ef·fer·vesc·ing, ef·fer·vesc·es
1. To emit small bubbles of gas, as a carbonated or fermenting liquid.

2. To escape from a liquid as bubbles; bubble up.

3.
 gusto of carnival; life revelling in rebellion against the clock.

Jay Griffiths is the author of Pip Pip: A Sideways Look at Time published by Flamingo, 1999.
COPYRIGHT 2002 New Internationalist Magazine
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Griffiths, Jay
Publication:New Internationalist
Date:Mar 1, 2002
Words:1744
Previous Article:How corporations steal your time.
Next Article:American Karoshi: Karoshi, or working yourself to death, was thought to be a uniquely Japanese phenomenon. But, as Matthew Reiss explains, Americans...
Topics:

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles