Un)timely Crises explores how ‘crisis’—as a narrative, concept, grammar, and experience—structures time and space. This collectively written volume extends Bakhtin’s ‘chronotope’ to challenge mobilizations of crisis within neoliberal governmentality. The book explores how contemporary crises can trigger memories and traumas of earlier events as well as foster practices of resistance and alternative visions of the future. Drawing from across disciplines and geographical contexts, (Un)timely Crises reimagines the relation of ‘crisis’ with ‘critique’, proposing future trajectories for thinking and living in and through crisis.
Table of Content
1. Introduction.- 2. Navigating chronic crisis.- 3. Grammars of/in crisis.- 4. In and out of crisis: chronotopes of memory.- 5. Critique under duress: what is the role of critique and radical critical theory in the present of pathos?
About the author
Maria Boletsi is Endowed Professor of Modern Greek Studies (Marilena Laskaridis Chair) at the University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, and Assistant Professor in Comparative Literature at Leiden University, Netherlands.
Natashe Lemos Dekker is Postdoctoral Researcher at the Leiden Institute of Cultural Anthropology and Development Sociology, Netherlands.
Kasia Mika is Lecturer in Comparative Literature at Queen Mary University of London, UK.
Ksenia Robbe is Senior Lecturer in European Culture and Literature at the University of Groningen, Netherlands.