The Gladys Boen Scholarship is awarded “for the best short story, poem or collection of poems, or essay submitted by an undergraduate currently enrolled in the university.” The Creative Writing Scholarship Committee had this to say on Maren Schettler’s “The History of Hurry”: “With its fragmented form and its melding of criticism with the personal essay, Maren Schettler’s essay enacts the very principle defended in her essay’s argument: that we must slow down, resist the urge to hurry, and break free from the rule of clocks and calendars.
This work exists in opposition to capitalism and is intended to create a temporary space in which jo...
Time is perceived to be a valuable resource (Lauer 4). Some people even compare managing their time ...
In Wait: The Useful Art of Procrastination, Frank Partnoy argues that decisions of all kinds, whethe...
In The Slow Professor, Maggie Berg and Barbara K. Seeber\u27s thoughtful contribution to the convers...
Kelly Johnson diagnoses our busy scurrying as anxiety about time. But time is not a scarce resour...
I’m still working on getting better at those more important, formative habits that help me live in s...
When viewed in the broader context of late modernity, responses to the increasingly frenetic academi...
Changes in economy and society since the early nineteenth century have often been associated with th...
This paper describes a neglected aspect of the critique of academic ‘cultures of speed’ offered by M...
CONTENTS: Afterschool Pit Stop; High Stakes; Lunchtime in Atlantic City; Tea Parties; Richmond Avenu...
In Relative Speeds: Wordsworth, De Quincey, and the Poetics of Pace, I demonstrate that pace plays a...
We live in fast pace. Faster than our human bodies have ever done during our entire existence. Slown...
„Waiting as Resistance: Lingering, Loafing, and Whiling Away” is a critique of the economics of cons...
“Time is of the essence” “A Wrinkle in Time” “Times Like These” “Killing time” Whether in contract l...
To many disgruntled with the quantification of scholarship, its impossible demands and meaningless m...
This work exists in opposition to capitalism and is intended to create a temporary space in which jo...
Time is perceived to be a valuable resource (Lauer 4). Some people even compare managing their time ...
In Wait: The Useful Art of Procrastination, Frank Partnoy argues that decisions of all kinds, whethe...
In The Slow Professor, Maggie Berg and Barbara K. Seeber\u27s thoughtful contribution to the convers...
Kelly Johnson diagnoses our busy scurrying as anxiety about time. But time is not a scarce resour...
I’m still working on getting better at those more important, formative habits that help me live in s...
When viewed in the broader context of late modernity, responses to the increasingly frenetic academi...
Changes in economy and society since the early nineteenth century have often been associated with th...
This paper describes a neglected aspect of the critique of academic ‘cultures of speed’ offered by M...
CONTENTS: Afterschool Pit Stop; High Stakes; Lunchtime in Atlantic City; Tea Parties; Richmond Avenu...
In Relative Speeds: Wordsworth, De Quincey, and the Poetics of Pace, I demonstrate that pace plays a...
We live in fast pace. Faster than our human bodies have ever done during our entire existence. Slown...
„Waiting as Resistance: Lingering, Loafing, and Whiling Away” is a critique of the economics of cons...
“Time is of the essence” “A Wrinkle in Time” “Times Like These” “Killing time” Whether in contract l...
To many disgruntled with the quantification of scholarship, its impossible demands and meaningless m...
This work exists in opposition to capitalism and is intended to create a temporary space in which jo...
Time is perceived to be a valuable resource (Lauer 4). Some people even compare managing their time ...
In Wait: The Useful Art of Procrastination, Frank Partnoy argues that decisions of all kinds, whethe...