A interdisciplinary podcast where academics from various disciplines discuss the concept of time from the perspective of their respective subjects.
This series explores how humans experience and process time illustrated by some examples from psychology & cognitive neuroscience, philosophy and particle physics. Ultimately, it explores how human beings experience temporality in numerous and varying ways, at different scales and in different contexts such as individual, social, political, cultural, environmental - to name but a few.
Hosted by Ailbhe Nic Thoirealaigh, she/her, a part-time PhD Candidate in Archaeology at the University of Glasgow, and a part-time Engagement Producer in the arts industry.
This podcast offers an interdisciplinary approach to the challenges of time theory present in archaeological research and practice. It explores multi-scalar and multi-disciplinary approaches to temporality to disrupt metanarratives and shines a light on the potential for colonial perspectives to creep into traditional in historical research.
Ultimately, this series posits that a lack of understanding of multiple temporalities restricts our ability to comprehensively, inclusively and respectfully narrate the past. As an alternative, it offers a multi-scalar temporal approach as both conceptual, and practical solutions to those issues, and presents a way to 'simultaneously' discuss multiple, interconnected, and diverging narratives of history.
Ailbhe's research is an attempt to give voice back to those whose lived experiences sit out-with traditional metanarratives of human history.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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