2009 volume 27(6) pages 987 – 1009
doi:10.1068/d7907

Cite as:
Harrison P, 2009, "In the absence of practice" Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 27(6) 987 – 1009

Download citation data in RIS format

In the absence of practice

Paul Harrison

Received 21 September 2007; in revised form 6 November 2008; published online 19 October 2009

Abstract. Increasingly the focus of social analysis and explanation is falling upon doings, on actions and practices, insofar as they are understood to be the origin rather than the effect of signification and meaning. This paper offers a sympathetic critique of such ‘ontologisation’ of practice, asking what is presumed about the human and the social when practice is taken as the primary social ‘thing’. The critique works by outlining, somewhat tentatively, a ‘phenomenology’ of dreamless sleep; a situation and a state in which a subject cannot be said to be doing anything at all. The figures that will be discussed below lie flat out; for the moment they have no bearing or gait, no focused or dispersed attention, no reflexive, deliberative or tacit understanding. This discussion is developed through a reading of Tim Ingold’s (2000) landmark essay “The temporality of the landscape” (in The Perception of the Environment Routledge), here taken as exemplary of a broad range of practice based approaches. While looking specifically at issues around skill, place, and sociality, the overarching claim of the paper is that thinking about sleep and about being a being which sleeps provides a way of touching on the susceptibility and finitude of corporeal existence. A susceptibility and a finitude which, I suggest, are the very condition of possibility of practice and action.

This article has supplementary online material: Colour figure

Restricted material:

PDF Full-text PDF size: 750 Kb

HTML References  102 references, 32 with DOI links (Crossref)

Your computer (IP address: 38.107.191.106) has not been recognised as being on a network authorised to view the full text or references of this article. Please contact your serials librarian (subscriptions information).