Reframing The Postindustrial: Landscapes of Extraction between Reclamation and Reinvention

IF 0.6 4区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE
J. Langhorst, K. Bolton
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Abstract:Sites created for and abandoned by hardrock mining operations in the Rocky Mountain West are among the most layered, complex, and noteworthy landscapes in America, expressive of the entangled relationships between the human processes of extraction and reclamation and nonhuman processes of geological and ecological change. Few types of landscape have involved such localized drastic change of the surface of the earth and such significant impacts on associated nonhuman and human systems. The spatial and temporal scales of mining and postmining operations and their impacts extend far beyond the immediate local context, recent history, and immediate future. The complexity of such landscapes transcends the physical and lies in the various values that drove the processes of extraction, as well as those at play in addressing postextraction conditions. They pose fundamental challenges to many disciplines and have prompted a rethinking of traditional concepts and practices of preservation and reclamation. This paper develops a framework that meaningfully responds to the complexities of postmining landscapes (PMLs). It is connected to a critical investigation of functional-performative and aesthetic-experiential considerations and an engagement of underlying meanings and values. It casts PMLs as dynamic and ever-changing sites to model and render legible new forms of human-environment relationships.
重构后工业时代:开垦与再造之间的提取景观
摘要:美国西部落基山脉(Rocky Mountain West)因硬岩开采而形成和废弃的遗址是美国最具层叠性、复杂性和值得关注的景观之一,表达了人类开采和开垦过程与非人类地质和生态变化过程之间的纠缠关系。很少有景观类型涉及地球表面如此局部的剧烈变化以及对相关的非人类和人类系统产生如此重大的影响。采矿和采矿后作业的空间和时间尺度及其影响远远超出了直接的当地背景、最近的历史和不久的将来。这种景观的复杂性超越了物理,在于驱动提取过程的各种价值观,以及在处理提取后条件时发挥作用的价值观。它们对许多学科构成了根本性的挑战,并促使人们重新思考传统的保护和开垦概念和实践。本文开发了一个有意义地响应采矿后景观(pml)复杂性的框架。它连接到功能-表演和审美-体验的考虑和潜在的意义和价值的参与的批判性调查。它将pml作为动态的和不断变化的站点来建模和呈现清晰的人与环境关系的新形式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
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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