Storying with Groundwater

D. Wardle
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Subterranean waters enable life. Humans, non-human animals and enmeshed ecosystems of more-than-human entities, such as river and creek sides, mound springs and swamps, interact with groundwater in a myriad of complex relationships. Hundreds of Australian inland towns and communities rely on bore water. Population counts of people dependent on aquifers across Australia, on the Asian and African continents, in the Middle East and across the Americas reach into the billions. Despite this, there are few literary expressions of groundwater’s potency and vulnerability in the Australian imaginary (Wardle). This essay draws upon fictional portrayals of groundwater from the climate fiction manuscript, Why We Cry (Wardle), to suggest the ways that climate fiction might make a small shift from the ‘derangement’ of blindness to subterranean places through the novel’s endeavours to osmotically affect readers. 
利用地下水蓄水
地下水使生命得以存在。人类、非人类动物和超越人类实体的生态系统,如河流和小溪边、山泉和沼泽,以无数复杂的关系与地下水相互作用。数以百计的澳大利亚内陆城镇和社区依赖于地下水。在澳大利亚、亚洲和非洲大陆、中东和整个美洲,依赖含水层生活的人口数量达到数十亿。尽管如此,在澳大利亚的想象中,地下水的潜力和脆弱性很少有文学表达(沃德尔)。这篇文章借鉴了气候小说手稿《我们为什么哭泣》(Wardle)中对地下水的虚构描绘,提出了气候小说可能会从盲目的“错乱”到地下的方式,通过小说的努力潜移移化地影响读者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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