Climate Change and Landscape Preservation: Rethinking Our Strategies

IF 0.6 4区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE
R. Melnick
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

As we lean into the headwinds of this era of climate change, preserving cultural landscapes can sometimes seem confusing, difficult, and thorny. How might those who are committed to resource preservation, protection, and continuity respond and adjust to these long-building but only recently acknowledged developments? We live in a time when it might be easier to deny or avoid the reality of the impact of climate change on our resources, both natural and cultural. This issue of Change Over Time directly addresses, through theory and practice, the ways in which climate change is already affecting cultural landscapes that are significant, in some cases precious, and in all cases worthy of our attention, protection, and caring.The response to climate change's impact on cultural landscapes cannot be refined without considering a number of deeper and, in some cases, more deeply rooted issues and concepts. These stem not only from our collective frustration with forces that are well beyond our control, but also from long-held contradictions as we seek to contain, redefine, and disassemble the nature/culture dichotomy. In most cases, these issues could not have been anticipated in the Venice Charter (1964), the Historic Preservation Act (1966), the Burra Charter (1979), or other fundamental declarations of preser vation/conservation tenets. In the dedication to protect critical and valued resources, climate change issues require that we be nimble and flexible, yet adhere to basic beliefs and ideals.Cultural landscapes are a relatively recent addition to the historic preservation glossary. That issue has now been effectively settled, and does not need to be reargued here. Nonetheless, it is instructive to remember that cultural landscapes are often on the verge of historic preservation orthodoxy, even as the term has reached a level of often illinfor med use and popularity. Not all old structures are historically important; not all cultural landscapes are significant.Perhaps the most challenging concept in cultural landscape preservation is the fundamental understanding that change, unlike for most other cultural resources, is not merely tolerated; it is often an inherent and desired characteristic. "Landscape" is a noun and a verb; it is a "thing" and it is an "activity," a "development," or a "process." Into this already complex mix comes climate change, those big, broad, often subtle, and sometimes overwhelming forces that moderate the very processes that have informed the cultural landscape.As we settle more deeply into the twenty-first century, questions and concerns around climate change are clearly ever more pressing. Although it may seem that some seasons are cooler, or wetter, or drier, or just as they have always been, the overwhelming scientific evidence is that we have, in fact, embarked on a period of substantial humancaused climate change. We need to look at and comprehend the impact of environmental change on the world we know and love. In many ways, it is a bonding of a humanities perspective and a scientific lens.As with much science, research in climate change is as much an art as it is an exact discipline. We have come to expect, through lifelong indoctrination, that science most often has the right answer. This is, at best, an unreasonable expectation with which to burden those who experiment, take intellectual and professional risks, and seek answers that are often unimaginable or outside our accepted worldviews. We hear of "paradigm shifts," but, as Thomas Kuhn reminded us, these are really revolutions in our thinking, not merely shifts.1 We need a revolution, and not merely a shift, in our thinking about historically significant cultural landscapes, their preservation or protection, and our response to human-inflicted changes to robust ecological systems.The best science, it would seem, expects and accepts many errors, mistakes, and miscalculations on the way to establishing new understandings, new paradigms, and new truths. …
气候变化与景观保护:重新思考我们的策略
当我们直面这个气候变化时代的逆风时,保护文化景观有时似乎令人困惑、困难和棘手。那些致力于资源保存、保护和连续性的人如何应对和调整这些长期建设但最近才得到承认的发展?我们生活在一个可能更容易否认或避免气候变化对我们的资源(包括自然资源和文化资源)影响的现实的时代。本期《随时间而变化》通过理论和实践,直接阐述了气候变化已经对文化景观造成的影响,这些文化景观具有重要意义,在某些情况下是珍贵的,在所有情况下都值得我们关注、保护和关怀。应对气候变化对文化景观的影响,如果不考虑一些更深层次的、在某些情况下更根深蒂固的问题和概念,就无法完善。这不仅源于我们对远远超出我们控制的力量的集体挫折感,而且源于我们试图遏制、重新定义和分解自然/文化二分法时长期存在的矛盾。在大多数情况下,这些问题在《威尼斯宪章》(1964年)、《历史保护法案》(1966年)、《布拉宪章》(1979年)或其他关于保护/保护原则的基本宣言中是无法预料到的。在致力于保护重要和宝贵资源的过程中,气候变化问题要求我们既要灵活,又要坚持基本信念和理想。文化景观是历史保护术语表中相对较新的内容。这个问题现在已经有效地解决了,不需要在这里重新辩论。尽管如此,记住文化景观经常处于历史保护正统的边缘是有启发意义的,即使这个词已经达到了一个经常被误用和流行的程度。并非所有的老建筑都具有重要的历史意义;并非所有的文化景观都是重要的。也许文化景观保护中最具挑战性的概念是对变化的基本理解,与大多数其他文化资源不同,变化不仅仅是被容忍的;它通常是一种固有的和期望的特征。“Landscape”既是名词又是动词;它是一个“事物”,是一个“活动”,一个“发展”或一个“过程”。在这个已经很复杂的混合体中,还有气候变化,这些巨大的、广泛的、往往是微妙的、有时是压倒性的力量,它们调节了影响文化景观的进程。随着我们越来越深入地进入21世纪,有关气候变化的问题和担忧显然越来越紧迫。虽然有些季节看起来更冷、更湿、更干,或者一直都是这样,但压倒性的科学证据表明,我们实际上已经进入了一个人类造成的重大气候变化时期。我们需要观察和理解环境变化对我们所熟悉和喜爱的世界的影响。在许多方面,它是人文视角和科学视角的结合。与许多科学一样,气候变化研究既是一门精确的学科,也是一门艺术。通过一生的灌输,我们已经开始期望科学通常有正确的答案。这充其量是一种不合理的期望,给那些从事实验、冒着智力和职业风险、寻求通常难以想象或超出我们公认世界观的答案的人带来了负担。我们听说过“范式转换”,但是,正如托马斯·库恩提醒我们的那样,这是我们思想上的真正革命,而不仅仅是转变我们需要一场革命,而不仅仅是转变我们对具有历史意义的文化景观的思考,它们的保存或保护,以及我们对人类造成的强大生态系统变化的反应。看来,最好的科学在建立新理解、新范式和新真理的过程中,预期并接受许多错误、错误和误判。…
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
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0.00%
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期刊介绍: Change Over Time is a semiannual journal publishing original, peer-reviewed research papers and review articles on the history, theory, and praxis of conservation and the built environment. Each issue is dedicated to a particular theme as a method to promote critical discourse on contemporary conservation issues from multiple perspectives both within the field and across disciplines. Themes will be examined at all scales, from the global and regional to the microscopic and material. Past issues have addressed topics such as repair, adaptation, nostalgia, and interpretation and display.
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