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Time-Space Flexibility and Work: Analyzing the 'Anywhere and Anytime Office' in the Entertainment, New Media, and Arts Sector
- Source :
- Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research, Vol 5, Pp 339-360 (2013), Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research, Vol 5, Iss 3 (2013)
- Publication Year :
- 2013
- Publisher :
- Linköping University Electronic Press, 2013.
-
Abstract
- The applied cultural analysis work presented in this article was conducted with independent professionals who work in a flexible time-space format – known as telework – for the entertainment, new media, and arts sector in the Los Angeles area. Most participants are associates of the production and post-production boutique “Studio Can” as well as the curatorial new media and arts nonprofit organization “PalMarte.” When working in a flexible time-space format, boundaries between leisure/family life and work at home, or personal and public realms, tend to become blurred. This blurred context involves a web of cultural complexity that exists behind the materialization of boundaries. Through empirical material, this article examines rhythms and mechanisms between flexibility and stability, unveiling a viscous consistency of everyday life. This work helps to better understand the relation between leisure/family life and work at home, as well as stability and change, to rethink these realms and how they relate to each other but also how they transform one another. Although culturally different, these realms are bridged through the material culture that surrounds them. As conveyors, objects (such as a heating pad) and activities culturally transport participants between realms. Research methods combined time-diaries, interviews, observation, visual ethnography, and autoethnography. While applying academic knowledge into a non-academic setting to rethink realms and how they relate and transform each other in a bridged relationship, this work is also an invitation to rethink the relationship between the realms of academia and non-academia.
- Subjects :
- Cultural Studies
Autoethnography
Context (language use)
lcsh:A
computer.software_genre
The arts
Entertainment
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
work
entertainment
Sociology
Everyday life
boundaries
Multimedia
business.industry
telework
Flexibility (personality)
home
Public relations
new media and arts
New media
flexibility
Applied cultural analysis
Information and Communications Technology
Anthropology
leisure
lcsh:General Works
business
computer
routines
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20001525
- Volume :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cfe16782afeb33bcfcf4d2e32f0a494f