Giordano Nanni
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Conclusion
From colonisation to globalisation
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The official deployment of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) in 1884 indeed heralded a new era of global timekeeping, allowing people, towns, cities, ports, railways and colonies to connect with metropolitan centres, and between each other, through a single space-time matrix. In the same year that the Cape Colony adopted GMT, Melbourne hosted an 'Intercolonial Survey Conference' which campaigned heavily for the adoption of standard time in the local media. The shared temporal discourse which connected Britain and its colonies with one another in turn reflected and reinforced dominant notions of religion, civilisation and modernity, thus helping to construct the colonisers' own identities and civilities. Nineteenth-century colonial constructions of Indigenous temporality have indeed trickled down into government policy, affecting the lives of Aboriginal people in Australia well into the twentieth century.

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The colonisation of time

Ritual, routine and resistance in the British Empire

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