The water heritage of China: the polders of Tai Lake Basin as continuing landscape

IF 0.8 3区 历史学 0 ARCHITECTURE
Yi-Wen Wang, J. Pendlebury, C. Nolf
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper examines the long history of planned water and landscape management in China, focusing on the Tai Lake Basin located in the southern part of the Yangtze River Delta. To position this polder landscape within the broad spectrum of water heritage in China, the paper examines the historical perceptions and symbolism of water and its decisive role in shaping Chinese outlooks on empire, urban settlements and landscapes. It then delineates the evolution of polder landscapes in the Tai Lake Basin, which has been recurrently transformed since the fifth century BCE through to their contemporary condition. Despite changing material forms, the polder landscapes in the region evidence continuous endeavour to manage water for both productive (food) and preventive (flood) purposes. The latter part of the paper considers to what extent these polder landscapes might now be considered as a ‘continuing landscape’ – an organically evolved cultural landscape reflecting the changing needs of society, economy, government as well as flood prevention. Today, with few features that are materially historical, their continued existence has been threatened by urbanization, land consolidation and agricultural modernization. The paper advocates historically informed landscape planning to safeguard these dynamic and adaptive agricultural landscapes.
中国的水遗产:作为连续景观的太湖流域圩田
本文以长江三角洲南部的太湖流域为研究对象,考察了中国规划水与景观管理的悠久历史。为了在中国广泛的水遗产中定位这一圩田景观,本文考察了水的历史观念和象征意义,以及它在塑造中国人对帝国、城市聚落和景观的看法中所起的决定性作用。然后,它描绘了太湖盆地圩田景观的演变,从公元前5世纪到现在,这些圩田景观一直在不断变化。尽管物质形态不断变化,但该地区的圩田景观表明,为了生产(粮食)和预防(洪水)的目的,人们一直在努力管理水。论文的后半部分考虑了这些圩田景观在多大程度上可以被认为是一种“持续景观”——一种有机进化的文化景观,反映了社会、经济、政府以及防洪不断变化的需求。如今,它们几乎没有什么实质性的历史特征,它们的继续存在受到城市化、土地整理和农业现代化的威胁。本文主张在历史背景下进行景观规划,以保护这些动态和适应性的农业景观。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
85
期刊介绍: Planning Perspectives is a peer-reviewed international journal of history, planning and the environment, publishing historical and prospective articles on many aspects of plan making and implementation. Subjects covered link the interest of those working in economic, social and political history, historical geography and historical sociology with those in the applied fields of public health, housing construction, architecture and town planning. The Journal has a substantial book review section, covering UK, North American and European literature.
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