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@article{ Goudsblom2023,
 title = {The Worm and the Clock: On the Genesis of a Global Time Regime.},
 author = {Goudsblom, Johan},
 journal = {Historical Social Research},
 number = {1},
 pages = {240-258},
 volume = {48},
 year = {2023},
 issn = {0172-6404},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.48.2023.12},
 abstract = {The spread of a unitary time grid over the whole world is a remarkable aspect of globalisation. Time is not a natural given; as suggested by Norbert Elias, it is a means, devised by humans, for comparing processes of various speed and duration. As such, it is function of "timing" - an activity which is inherently place-bound. Four phases can be distinguished in the development leading up to universal global timing. In Phase 1 there are no instruments for dividing the day into clearcut intervals such as hours. Phase 2 brings various instruments such as sundials and waterclocks with which the day is divided into 24 hours of unequal length. In Phase 3 the mechanical clock makes standardisation of the hour possible. In Phase 4 the world is divided into 24 time zones, with a synchronised schedule of hours, minutes and seconds spread globally as an invisible net.},
 keywords = {Zeit; time; Begriff; concept; Messung; measurement; Standardisierung; standardization (meth.); Globalisierung; globalization}}