Time was an elusive substance it was rich, messy, even chaotic. Prior to that, time bent to circumstance and passed at different speeds: canonical time followed the sun, agrarian time the moon cycle, astronomical time the passage of planets, and political time the solar and water clocks of plazas and churches. Yet the minute hand was a Renaissance invention, and time only became monolithic in the eighteenth century with the rise of modern nation-states that imposed their way of measuring duration on the Western world. We tend to think of time as omnivorous, steady, ticking along to the relentless rhythm of the clock. Lana Lin’s The Cancer Journals Revisitedby Amber PowerĮlaine Kahn’s Romance or The Endby Rob GoyanesĪnthony Roth Costanzoby Justin Vivian Bondįrom Some Girls Walk Into The Country They Are Fromįrom Elementary Poetryby Andrei Monastyrski Glenn O’Brien’s Intelligence for Dummiesby Jeremy Sigler Kirsten Grimstad and Susan Rennie’s The New Woman’s Survival Catalog: A Woman-made Bookby Carmen Hermo Peter Brook and Marie-Hélène Estienne’s Why?Ĭéline Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fireby Mark Lukenbill
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