Is Bergen Unseasonal? On Europe’s Shifting Relation to Seasons

Scott Bremer
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Abstract

This article reflects on whether and how European communities’ cultural frameworks of seasons are coming to poorly correspond to the climatic conditions they experience, and the implications for how Europe adapts to climatic (and social and environmental) change. It starts from a colder- and drier-than-normal autumn and winter (2023/2024) in Bergen, Norway, and a local researcher’s investigation into why these climatically anomalous seasons were being culturally celebrated as ‘seasonal weather’. He compares studies into the Bergen population’s cultural expectations for weather conditions in each of the four seasons, with the statistical climatic record, and reveals a mismatch. He argues that the four-season framework prominent in Europe poorly describes or anticipates meteorology in Bergen, and that other frameworks could fit better. The article argues that seasonal frameworks continuously evolve with interlinked environmental and social change – from drivers such as climate change, landscape modification, social evolution, and globalization – so that seasonal mismatches are as much about how societies culturally re-conceive of seasons as about physical climate change for instance. This is important because the way European societies divide the year by seasonal expectations affects how they relate to the meteorological conditions they come to face each season.
卑尔根是反季节的吗?欧洲与季节关系的转变
本文探讨了欧洲社区的季节文化框架是否以及如何与他们所经历的气候条件不相称,以及对欧洲如何适应气候(以及社会和环境)变化的影响。本报告从挪威卑尔根一个比正常秋冬(2023/2024 年)更寒冷、更干燥的季节入手,探讨了当地研究人员为何将这些气候反常的季节作为 "季节性天气 "进行文化庆祝。他将卑尔根人对四季气候条件的文化期望与统计气候记录进行了比较,发现两者之间存在不匹配。他认为,欧洲著名的四季框架不能很好地描述或预测卑尔根的气象,其他框架可能更适合卑尔根。文章认为,季节框架随着相互关联的环境和社会变化而不断演变--这些变化来自气候变化、地貌改变、社会演变和全球化等驱动因素--因此,季节不匹配既与物理气候变化有关,也与社会在文化上如何重新认识季节有关。这一点非常重要,因为欧洲社会按季节预期划分一年的方式会影响他们与每个季节所面临的气象条件的关系。
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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