Hope, Anger, and Engineering in a Reconstruction Landscape

Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1353/bdl.2022.0013
John D. Davis
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Abstract

abstract:In the years following the Civil War, a radical congressman conspired with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to undertake a massive levee project that would have created the largest freedpeople’s colony of the Reconstruction era. The project was never built, but the rhetoric around the federal infrastructure project illustrates the complex motivations behind attempts to redesign the American landscape after emancipation. Engineers and politicians channeled strongly felt political emotions into changes in the land, instrumentalizing complex feelings about the war and the injustices of slavery into physical and symbolic acts. Freedpeople navigated the notions of order that White military and civil officials tried to impose on the defeated South, forming communities according to their own priorities and finding opportunities where possible in a landscape of conflict that continued well after the official cessation of hostilities. The article concludes that an examination of the emotional motivations of both designers and the various “publics” that designed landscapes serve can illuminate the relationship between design and the desire for justice, and what role postwar actors imagined that the built environment could play in support of constructing a multiracial democracy.
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重建景观中的希望、愤怒和工程
在南北战争之后的几年里,一位激进的国会议员与美国陆军工程兵团合谋进行了一项大规模的堤坝工程,该工程将创造出重建时期最大的自由民殖民地。该项目从未建成,但围绕联邦基础设施项目的言论说明了解放后重新设计美国景观的企图背后的复杂动机。工程师和政治家将强烈的政治情绪引导到土地的变化中,将对战争和奴隶制不公正的复杂情感工具化为实际和象征性的行为。白人军方和文职官员试图将秩序观念强加给战败的南方,自由人遵循这一观念,根据自己的优先事项组建社区,并在正式停止敌对行动后仍持续不断的冲突中尽可能地寻找机会。文章的结论是,对设计师和设计景观所服务的各种“公众”的情感动机的考察,可以阐明设计与对正义的渴望之间的关系,以及战后行动者想象的建筑环境在支持建设多种族民主方面可以发挥的作用。
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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