{"title":"The Blued Trees Symphony as Transdisciplinary Mediation for Environmental Policy","authors":"Aviva Rahmani","doi":"10.1525/001C.25256","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"As the devastating impacts of anthropocentric behaviors have emerged in the Anthropocene, the specter of globalized “ecocide” has also emerged, requiring creative policy solutions. The *Blued Trees* project was an experiment in modeling how art might forestall ecocide by legally redefining public (economic) good to reconcile with common (benefit to a community) good. This continental-scale work of interdisciplinary art was copyrighted in 2015, requiring courts to recognize an emergent overlap between copyright ownership, eminent domain law, and new forms of art. My intention was to create a transdisciplinary, art-based model for sustainable relationships with other species and across demographics, which could be scaled in the court system for policy implications. My premises were that transdisciplinary thinking—work that dissolves disciplinary boundaries—can best preserve habitat integrity in these complex, uncertain times, and that laws are the building blocks of policy. *The Blued Trees Symphony* was conceived as sonified biogeographic sculpture in five movements based on the eighteenth-century sonata form, with the musical structure narrating a contest between Earth rights and accountability for ecocide. The legal theory was litigated in a mock trial produced with the fellowship program A Blade of Grass in 2018. The work, which brings together art, music, and performance with law, ecological science, and dynamic systems theory, continues as a work in progress in that some of its elements, such as trees and ecosystems, the score, and the vital need to stop ecocide, remain alive and very much in play today.","PeriodicalId":235953,"journal":{"name":"Media+Environment","volume":"305 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Media+Environment","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1525/001C.25256","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
As the devastating impacts of anthropocentric behaviors have emerged in the Anthropocene, the specter of globalized “ecocide” has also emerged, requiring creative policy solutions. The *Blued Trees* project was an experiment in modeling how art might forestall ecocide by legally redefining public (economic) good to reconcile with common (benefit to a community) good. This continental-scale work of interdisciplinary art was copyrighted in 2015, requiring courts to recognize an emergent overlap between copyright ownership, eminent domain law, and new forms of art. My intention was to create a transdisciplinary, art-based model for sustainable relationships with other species and across demographics, which could be scaled in the court system for policy implications. My premises were that transdisciplinary thinking—work that dissolves disciplinary boundaries—can best preserve habitat integrity in these complex, uncertain times, and that laws are the building blocks of policy. *The Blued Trees Symphony* was conceived as sonified biogeographic sculpture in five movements based on the eighteenth-century sonata form, with the musical structure narrating a contest between Earth rights and accountability for ecocide. The legal theory was litigated in a mock trial produced with the fellowship program A Blade of Grass in 2018. The work, which brings together art, music, and performance with law, ecological science, and dynamic systems theory, continues as a work in progress in that some of its elements, such as trees and ecosystems, the score, and the vital need to stop ecocide, remain alive and very much in play today.
随着人类世中以人类为中心的行为的破坏性影响的出现,全球化“生态灭绝”的幽灵也出现了,需要创造性的政策解决方案。“蓝树”项目是一个模拟艺术如何通过合法地重新定义公共(经济)利益与共同(社区利益)利益相协调来预防生态灭绝的实验。这一跨洲规模的跨学科艺术作品于2015年获得版权,要求法院认识到版权所有权、征用权法和新艺术形式之间出现的重叠。我的意图是创建一个跨学科的、基于艺术的模型,用于与其他物种和人口统计学的可持续关系,这可以在法院系统中进行扩展,以产生政策影响。我的前提是,跨学科的思考——消除学科界限的工作——可以在这个复杂、不确定的时代最好地保护栖息地的完整性,而法律是政策的基石。《蓝树交响曲》以18世纪奏鸣曲的形式为基础,由五个乐章组成的声音化的生物地理雕塑,音乐结构讲述了地球权利和生态灭绝责任之间的斗争。这一法律理论在2018年与奖学金项目《一片草叶》(a Blade of Grass)共同制作的模拟审判中被提起诉讼。这部作品将艺术、音乐和表演与法律、生态科学和动态系统理论结合在一起,作为一部不断发展的作品,它的一些元素,如树木和生态系统、乐谱和阻止生态灭绝的迫切需要,仍然存在,并且在今天发挥着很大的作用。