6533b7d4fe1ef96bd12620a4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Invisible streams : Process-thinking in Arendt

Ari-elmeri Hyvönen

subject

temporaalisuusSociology and Political ScienceProcess (engineering)05 social sciencesworld0507 social and economic geographyTemporalityArendtThinking processes0506 political scienceEpistemologyta5141050602 political science & public administrationta517freedomprocessSociologymaailma050703 geographyAdministration (government)vapausta611temporality

description

For Hannah Arendt, some of the most distinctive features of the modern age derived from the adoption of a process-imaginary in science, history, and administration. This article examines Arendt’s work, identifying what it calls the ‘process-frame’ in her criticism of imperialism, economy, and the biologization of politics. It discusses an interpretation in which ‘natality’ presents a completely alternative mode of temporality, a resistance to the process-frame. This interpretation, it is argued, needs to be specified by taking into account that political action both interrupts and starts processes of its own. To confine and overcome the negative effects of process-framing, it is important to emphasize action as a world-building activity – something capable of establishing a relatively stable area of the common world by initiating processes of its own. Second, it is also important to cultivate ways of thinking and perceiving particular acts as meaningfully independent of all-embracing processes.

10.1177/1368431016633572http://juuli.fi/Record/0278733616