Disembedding

    • Disembedding refers to the way in which contemporary social practices can no longer be primarily defined by their grounding, or embeddedness, in the local context of a restricted place and time.
    • When something is disembedded, it is moved from a concrete, tangible, local context to an abstract or virtual state.
    • Examples: Slavery in the new world disembedded the lived experiences of Africans and abstracted their social ties or kinships into commodities;
    • Money is disembedded value because it used to represent something material;
    • software is the act of disembedding a real world problem into a virtual one;
    • a clock time is disembedded time;
    • writing is disembedded language.