Chiasmic time: Being-in-time in time being
Salisbury, L; Baraitser, L
Date: 1 April 2022
Book chapter
Publisher
Waiting Times
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Abstract
Time Being is a collaborative film made by Ruairí Corr and Deborah Robinson that explores
the temporalities that emerge when the primacy of sight and sound in film is brought together
with touch, breath, vibration, smell, heat, and other somatic sensations that enable us to feel
ourselves in and through the world, remaking it as we ...
Time Being is a collaborative film made by Ruairí Corr and Deborah Robinson that explores
the temporalities that emerge when the primacy of sight and sound in film is brought together
with touch, breath, vibration, smell, heat, and other somatic sensations that enable us to feel
ourselves in and through the world, remaking it as we go. Ruairí is a creative maker living with
a complex set of visual and sensory-processing differences related to the condition
adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD). Deborah is an artist who uses film and neurodivergent
experiences of time and attention in ways that disrupt narrative sequence. As Ruairí and
Deborah developed a collaborative relationship over time, they used practice-as-research
methods that attended to Ruairí’s everyday experience to develop forms of audio-visual
representation that reframe normative versions of time. They worked together to find ways of
holding in film the time made when the world is sensed through the hands, the lungs, the
stomach, the skin, and through the temporal displacements of alternative experiences of sight
and sound. Through a practice of waiting, slowing, and attending to these sensations, the work
gradually emerged. This was not a form of coming to know ‘about’ the world, but one of
making sense of it ‘otherwise’, over and through time. And as the film slows the viewer down,
inviting them to wait with and dwell in the images and sounds, it works to expand
understandings of how the senses work according to multiple yet distinct tempos, beats, and
rhythms.
English and Creative Writing
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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