Modernity loves a schedule: progress bars, quarterly targets, “on time” development. But whose clock is that? Decolonizing time begins with a simple provocation: not all communities inhabit the same temporal order, and insisting they do has been one of empire’s quietest weapons.
Anthropologist Johannes Fabian called it the “denial of coevalness”: the colonial habit of placing others in a different time—primitive, belated—so domination looks like help. Mark Rifkin names its administrative form settler time: calendars, property regimes, and infrastructure that synchronize land to colonial economies while desynchronizing Indigenous life. Elizabeth Povinelli widens the frame with geontopower, where governance distinguishes the lively from the inert to justify extraction—treating certain worlds as resources outside history. Against this, Indigenous thinkers and artists—Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Kodwo Eshun, among many—stage counter-chronologies: survivals and futurities that refuse the metronome of “catching up.”
Decolonization and Temporalities
Three propositions anchor a decolonial approach to time:
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Time is governed. Calendars, workweeks, school terms, planting seasons: these are not neutral containers. They encode authority—who waits, who rushes, who gets deadlines, who gets delays. The colonizer doesn’t just take land; they reschedule it.
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Plural temporalities are practical, not poetic. Cyclical, seasonal, and ancestral times organize duties—reciprocity to rivers, obligations to kin across generations, ceremonies that pace stewardship. They are governance architectures, not folklore.
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Futurity is contested terrain. “Progress” often means assimilation to someone else’s clock. Decolonial futures are not late versions of the West; they’re worlds timed by other rhythms.
Case in Point
Seed time vs. market time. Consider Indigenous seed keepers who plant on lunar phases and soil memory. Their calendars sync with pollinators and local weather, not commodity futures. Agricultural aid programs that demand yield “this season” misread success, penalizing long-horizon fertility as inefficiency.
Diasporic Sabbath. In migrant neighborhoods, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays overlap—Muslim prayers, Jewish Shabbat, Christian services—producing a braided weekend that confounds the monoclock of a national workweek. Shops open late, markets bloom at odd hours; care and cash move on transoceanic time, tethered to remittance cycles and WhatsApp midnights.
Afrofuturist offsets. Following Eshun, Afrofuturism isn’t sci-fi décor; it is time travel as counter-history. By projecting Black survival forward, it refunds what was stolen by Middle Passage time—those centuries the archive miscounts. The beat itself is a clock: polyrhythms that keep several times at once.
Climate emergency vs. seasonal sovereignty. Emergency politics shouts “now!”—often at communities long held in bureaucratic later. Firefighting funds arrive instantly; water rights cases take decades. Decolonizing time insists that adaptation requires seasonal sovereignty: letting local calendars, not electoral ones, determine when to burn, sow, harvest, or rest.
Tactics: Designing for Temporal Pluralism
If time is governed, it can be governed otherwise. A few practical handles:
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Temporal Impact Assessments: Just as projects face environmental reviews, require audits of waiting, rushing, and seasonal disruption—who bears the delay, who captures the speed.
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Layered Calendars in Policy: Build legal carve-outs that recognize ceremonial seasons, subsistence cycles, and non-Gregorian observances as scheduling constraints, not “accommodations.”
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Archive Repair: Fund community-controlled timelines that map dispossession and resurgence across generations; let public institutions cite them as official chronologies in land and water claims.
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Rhythmic Infrastructure: Transit and clinic hours tuned to community peaks (harvests, pay cycles, prayer times); utility pricing that respects heat seasons rather than flat months.
Plural time is not a romance of slowness. Some communities demand faster clocks—emergency housing now, trials before memory fades. Others need protection from acceleration—mines pushed through “on schedule.” The ethic is not speed or slowness but tempo justice: aligning pace with place, obligation, and consent.
Why It Matters
When a single chronology rules, it naturalizes inequality: late for whom, early for whom, forever waiting for whom. Decolonizing time expands the political imagination. It turns policy into pacing, development into coordination, and culture into the art of keeping several tempos without collapse.
We can’t rewind history, but we can retune it. To live in counter-clock worlds is to replace the empire of deadlines with negotiated rhythms: some cyclical, some recursive, some defiantly offbeat. The future worth building won’t arrive “on time.” It will arrive on times—plural, argued over, shared.
Learn more: An Introduction to Chronopolitics