Hmm, I've never really approached questions of time 'directly' - generally it's through other lenses (X's or Y's take on time) - and there's nothing I know that is quite so 'concrete/historical' as anything Thompson would have written. The closest thing I can think of is a great essay by Isabelle Stengers and Didier Gille on time keeping devices and their social effects (look in your PMs!).
Otherwise, David Couzens Hoy's
The Time of Our Lives is a great overview of different 'continental' approaches to time which I really like.
Elizabeth Grosz's two books,
The Nick of Time and
Time Travels, might be
somewhat closer to what you've looking for, but they're more 'how to think about time and politics', and again, not anything like that Thompson essay (also, they're both essay collections themselves).
Henri Lefevbe's
Rhythmanalysis might be even closer (Lefebvre being a Marxist sociologist), but it's a short book that deals more with rhythm than it does with 'time' as such.
Errr, otherwise, there's Poalo Virno's
Déjà Vu and the End of History which I haven't read, but looks very much like something that matches what you're after.
Sciency-wise there's Lee Smolin's
Time Reborn and Ilya Prigogine's
The End of Certainty, which are superb (no politics at all!).
My last reccomendation might seem strange but is one of my favorite books I've ever read and has influenced me massively when thinking about time - Martin Hagglund's
Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life, which strictly speaking is a (very clear!) reading of Derrida on time, but which I think is absolutely super as a stand-alone book on time in general.
But yeah, this is all a very random scattering of things off the top of my head. Time is always something I've approached 'sideways on', so these recc's may not be the best/most relevant, but yeah.