Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Rhythms of navigating time and space in the UK House of Commons

Crewe, Emma

Rhythms of navigating time and space in the UK House of Commons Thumbnail


Authors



Contributors

Sophia Psarra
Editor

Claudia Schrag Sternberg
Editor

Uta Staiger
Editor

Abstract

Parliamentary scholars tend to classify the work of Members of Parliament (MPs) into roles and measure their activities, votes and outputs. They thereby miss the contradictory, performative and ambivalent processes in politics. Influenced by Goffman’s (1959) theatrical analogy in The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, I have tried to shift attention towards everyday processes by writing about performance and relationships in MPs’ political work. However, critical of my own former bias towards mind, knowledge and temporal perspectives, in my recent book on the Anthropology of Parliaments (2021) and in this chapter, I bring bodies and space more directly into the centre of my analysis. Building on ethnographic studies of space in parliaments (Abélès 2000, Floret 2010, Norton 2019, Puwar 2014, Rai 2014), and following Lefebvre’s rhythmanalysis (2013), in this chapter I will propose a systematic way to research the diversity of MPs’ work by looking at the rhythms of performance through time and space, using examples from my own ethnographic research into the House of Commons (2015).

Citation

Crewe, E. (2023). Rhythms of navigating time and space in the UK House of Commons. In S. Psarra, C. S. Sternberg, & U. Staiger (Eds.), Parliament Buildings: The architecture of politics in Europe (49-62). UCL Press

Acceptance Date Feb 2, 2023
Publication Date Oct 30, 2023
Deposit Date Mar 24, 2023
Publicly Available Date Dec 8, 2023
Publisher UCL Press
Pages 49-62
Book Title Parliament Buildings: The architecture of politics in Europe
ISBN 9781800085367
Keywords Westminster Parliament, rhythms of work
Publisher URL https://www.uclpress.co.uk/products/223071

Files






You might also like



Downloadable Citations