The Collaborative Development of a Language Renewal Program for Preschoolers

1988 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 297-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Britsch-Devany
Author(s):  
James Saunders ◽  
Simon Limbrick

This Intervention traces, through email exchanges and blog correspondence, the evolution of a piece for percussion (surfaces) written by James Saunders for Simon Limbrick. The full piece is intended to last twenty-four hours in performance, and involves the sonic activation and exploration of a variety of materials by means of a whole array of techniques. The collaborative development of surfaces is documented in words and images over the ten months from first ideas to first performance, revealing the intertwining of material, conceptual, practical and aesthetic considerations in the creative process.


2021 ◽  
pp. 147612702110120
Author(s):  
Siavash Alimadadi ◽  
Andrew Davies ◽  
Fredrik Tell

Research on the strategic organization of time often assumes that collective efforts are motivated by and oriented toward achieving desirable, although not necessarily well-defined, future states. In situations surrounded by uncertainty where work has to proceed urgently to avoid an impending disaster, however, temporal work is guided by engaging with both desirable and undesirable future outcomes. Drawing on a real-time, in-depth study of the inception of the Restoration and Renewal program of the Palace of Westminster, we investigate how organizational actors develop a strategy for an uncertain and highly contested future while safeguarding ongoing operations in the present and preserving the heritage of the past. Anticipation of undesirable future events played a crucial role in mobilizing collective efforts to move forward. We develop a model of future desirability in temporal work to identify how actors construct, link, and navigate interpretations of desirable and undesirable futures in their attempts to create a viable path of action. By conceptualizing temporal work based on the phenomenological quality of the future, we advance understanding of the strategic organization of time in pluralistic contexts characterized by uncertainty and urgency.


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