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Friday, July 3, 2026

Lefebvre, H. (2004) Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday Life. Translated by S. Elden and G. Moore. London: Continuum.


Lefebvre’s Rhythmanalysis proposes rhythm as the analytic key through which space, time, body, repetition and everyday life become mutually legible. Its iconic idea is that social life is composed through interacting rhythms: cyclical and linear, biological and technological, intimate and urban, measured and lived. The theoretical contribution is to add a temporal method to the production of space, showing that the city cannot be understood as morphology alone because it pulses through schedules, flows, interruptions, bodily routines, commodities, music, media and historical recurrence. Methodologically, rhythmanalysis places the analyst’s body at the centre of observation; the rhythmanalyst listens, waits, compares and detects discordances between lived time and imposed time. Its conceptual operation is temporal diagnosis: space is read through the repetitions and arrhythmias that organise its use. The bridge to the wider field connects Marxist urbanism, phenomenology, music, media theory, everyday life studies and spatial practice.