We spend more and more of our everyday lives in what Marc Augé calls non-places – homogenous, but bland places of transit
We spend more and more of our everyday lives in what Marc Augé calls non-places – homogenous, but bland places of transit.
Rhythms abound today, in a time where all manner of rhythms intersect and amplify each other. Rhythmanalysis enables us to discuss lived experience, both in terms of the constraints of contemporary society, but also the affordances (social, technological, cultural) that we all have access to, in different ways. By focusing on rhythms, we recognize how multiple, different forms inform both our…