Index
Clare Holdsworth
(Keele University, UK)
ISBN: 978-1-78743-699-2, eISBN: 978-1-78743-698-5
Publication date: 29 September 2021
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
Holdsworth, C. (2021), "Index", The Social Life of Busyness, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 177-180. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78743-698-520211013
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Clare Holdsworth
INDEX
Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes.
Achieving goals
, 63, 72, 139–141
Afternoons
, 30, 59, 96, 97, 147–8
American Time Use Survey (ATUS)
, 34
Anxiety
, 2, 25, 31,78, 99, 101–103, 115, 154
Appointments
, 30, 63, 98
Assemblages
, 5, 9, 19, 22, 87, 109, 111, 135
Austerity
, 91
Burnout
, 19, 151, 156
Busyness
frustrations
, 18, 49, 91, 152, 153
keep on going
, 105, 112
‘off the clock’
, 60, 74, 82
paradoxes
, 2, 19, 30, 149
therapeutic qualities
, 19, 134–136, 138–139, 142, 153, 157
Care
for others
, 17, 78–79, 81, 101, 132, 153, 144–145
for ourselves
, 8, 61, 68, 136, 142–143
space
, 98
Center Parcs
, 113
Childcare
gender differences
, 46, 156
spending more time
, 46, 47, 125
Children, Apollonian references to
, 78
Clocks
, 9, 25, 30–31
Community and Immunity
, 137–138
Control society
, 13, 26
Cooking and food preparation
, 46Covid-19 pandemic, 4–5, 10, 17, 20, 24, 104, 115–116, 151, 156–157
Craft
crafternoons
, 146–149
doing crochet
, 147–148
dressmaking
, 143–144
making time for
, 142
space
, 141–142
teaching crochet
, 7, 8, 142, 145–148
Critical Horology
, 25–26, 30
Dasein
, 24
De-territorialisation
, 85
Distraction
, 20, 77, 108, 144
Domestic
blurring with public or work space
, 94, 116
space
, 98–99, 157
Emotions of family life
, 120–121
Endurance
, 17, 156
Entrepreneurship
, 13, 105
Ethnicity
, 70n26, 125, 146n47, 156
European Commission Time Use Harmonisation Study
, 34
Events and non-events
, 19, 81
Exhaustion
, 13, 116, 122–124, 134
Experience economy
, 135
Family
families we live by
, 10, 19, 120–125
families we live with
, 125–131
holidays
, 113
pets
, 59, 98
practices
, 117–118
roles
, 113–114, 117
routines
, 126–127
Family-friendly policies
, 114
Feminist theory
, 17, 101, 138
Flow
activities
, 139–142
autotelic personality
, 140
experience sample method
, 139
experiencing flow
, 139–140
and the self
, 140–141
Forest bathing
, 135–136, 138
Four-day week
, 154–155
Four-hour week
, 93
Freedom
me-time
, 10, 133–135
positive and negative
, 135–136
Friends
, 78, 117, 149
Futures
, 153–155
Gender
identities
, 53, 57, 70, 72, 79
inequalities
, 17, 46, 155
norms
, 73, 77–81
Getting Things Done
, 9, 67, 79, 82, 85–86, 103
Global capitalism
, 16–17, 19, 94, 95
Guilt
, 122–124
Habit
changing habits
, 87, 154
thinking habits
, 18–19, 104
Happiness
, 138–139
Health and social care
, 5, 103
Hot or hotel-desking
, 85, 157
Household
co-ordinating household members
, 130, 152–153
distribution of activities
, 15, 46
Improperty
, 93
Income Inequality
, 93
Individualism
choice and self-biography
, 13
decline of institutional schedules
, 12, 58
social change
, 15, 152
Interdependency
, 4, 11, 19, 22, 26, 95, 110
International Association for Time Use Research
, 48
Lateness
, 31, 129
Leisure
in past time
, 20
relationship with freedom
, 135–136
study of
, 48
theory of leisure class
, 92
Libraries
, 109, 110
Life-course
, 5, 54
Lifestyle
, 22, 32, 66, 82, 93
Mass observation archive (MOA)
, 6, (see also One-day diaries)
2017 Autumn Directive
, 50–58, 94–100
Mealtimes
breakfast
, 52, 59, 100, 107, 130
evening meal
, 57, 99
lunchtime
, 57, 58, 97, 100
Means and ends
, 83–84, 139
Methodology
autoethnography
, 8, 143–145
content analysis
, 7, 72
narrative method
, 7, 96, 119–120
repurposing data
, 6, 120
sampling
, 70
secondary data analysis
, 6
Mind and body dualism
, 18
Molecular lines
, 13, 85
Moral economy
, 91–94
Networks
, 11, 12, 22, 94, 102, 110, 115
Newcastle-upon Tyne, UK
, 89
Nostalgia
, 22
One-day diaries
distribution of time-points
, 55–58
diurnal rhythms
, 55–56
structure of
, 51–54
Organisations
diversity of
, 95
hierarchal management
, 85–86, 102
horizontal management
, 85–86
spatial arrangement
, 95
Outsourcing
, 77–78, 93
Pace of life
, 11, 14, 16, 20, 22, 48–49
Phenomenology
direction of time
, 24
synthesis of past, present future
, 22–25, 84
Philofaxy
, 65
Politics of time
, 15–16, 24–25, 86
Post-structuralism
, 11
Power-chronography
, 16n26, 94
Pragmatism
, 83–84
Precarity
, 116
Procrastination
, 107, 147–148
Productivity 4
, 17, 33, 69, 74, 81–84, 93, 101, 102, 106, 117, 154–155
Protestant Ethic and Spirit of Capitalism
, 91–92
Reflective modernity
, 102
Relationships
intimate and family
, 1–2, 119, 128, 130
social disembedding of
, 115
at work
, 99, 125
Repetition
, 31, 92, 100, 110, 120, 128, 130, 132, 145, 144
Responsibility
conflicting
, 101
delegation of
, 12, 90, 101, 115, 152, 157
for others
, 144–145
for ourselves
, 68, 69, 77
reciprocity
, 137
Rhythm
analysis
, 32, 49–50
circular
, 50, 54
linear
, 9, 50, 55–56, 148
Routines
afternoon/evening
, 55–56
domestic
, 33–34, 113–114, 131
morning
, 59, 82, 107, 130
at work
, 60–61
writing routines
, 107–108
Scientific management
, 34
Self-discipline
, 81, 110
Self-employment
, 105
Self-help
history of
, 67
self-help for women
, 70
self-improvement
, 67–68
Self-help books on time management
aesthetics
, 73–75
authenticity
, 75–77
gender norms
, 77–81
Shopping
, 126
Social acceleration
, 8, 11, 14, 46
Social and cultural change
, 15, 21, 22, 48, 64, 91, 111, 138, 152
Social class
, 68, 70n26 115–116
Social practices
, 5, 18
Sorry We Missed You
, 89–91
Speed
, 14–15, 22, 26, 69, 103, 111
Sydney, Australia
, 117
Technological determinism
, 22
Technology
digital devices
, 66, 85, 99, 131
social change
, 11, 14, 27
social norms in use of
, 115
of the self
, 136
Teleology and non-teleology
, 72, 84, 141
The Clock
, 9, 29–32, 47, 50, 54, 56, 58
The Guardian Newspaper
A Writer’s Day
, 106–110
Tickler file
, 83–84
Time
authenticity
, 24
being on time
, 103–104
boundaries
, 94, 98
control over
, 104–105
cultural differences
, 31
exploitation
, 16, 21, 32, 93, 94
family
, 113–132
morality
, 134–135
recalibration
, 111
telling the time
, 54–55
wasting
, 148–149
Time experience, objective and subjective
, 16, 25, 31, 47–48
Time geography
, 49
Time management
individual strategies
, 81–82
managing space and other people
, 84–86
Time planners
aesthetics
, 66
history of
, 65
Time pressure
co-ordination with other people
, 100, 103, 123
individual use
, 51, 95
trends over time
, 20, 46–48
use of technology
, 131
at work
, 100–104
work extension
, 46
Time tracking
, 60–63
Time use data (see also American Time Use Survey)
gender differences in time use
, 44
history of
, 32–35
scoping study of
, 35–47
trends over time
, 35–47
in USA
, 32–35
in USSR
, 32–35
Time-motion study
, 34
Time-space
, 9, 13, 90
Time-space compression
, 14
Times Square
, 11, 157
Timescapes Archive
work and family lives study
, 114
Timing
significance of
, 9, 25–26
synchronization
, 49–50
24 hour society
, 15, 32, 133, 150
Unfairness
, 93–94
Waiting
, 16n28, 17, 86, 147–148
Weekends
, 113, 125–126
Well-being
, 135–6, 135n12, 138, 141–142, 142n37, 68
White Rabbit
, 1–5, 73, 157
Women’s paid employment
in 19th and early 20th centuries
, 20–21
trends over time
, 53
Work
colleagues
, 2, 96, 98, 99, 101–104
creative
, 106, 112
cultural history of
, 91–92
ethics
, 92
diversity of
, 94
moral outcomes of
, 94
paid and unpaid work
, 46
project work
, 102–103
space
, 9, 84–86, 103–104, 108–110, 116–117
starting and finishing
, 63
working at home
, 104–105, 99–100, 157
working for oneself
, 105–110
writing as work
, 94
Work-discipline
, 21, 92
Work-life balance (WLB)
, 114–118
being and not being in balance
, 114–116
changes over time
, 115
flexibility
, 115
individualization
, 115
relevance of financial constraints
, 118
retrospective
, 124–125
rhythms
, 117
Workaholics
, 106
Yukashima, Japan
, 136