黑色星期六丛林大火灾难:在灾害风险和气候变化交流中以艺术为基础的知识转化中发现诗歌。

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Evonne Miller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究采用 "发现诗歌 "这一基于艺术的研究方法,即从现有文本中创作类似诗歌的散文,来分享 2009 年澳大利亚 "黑色星期六 "丛林大火灾难(造成 173 人死亡)的亲身经历。在概述了创作过程之后,本文将 "发现诗歌 "应用于现有文本:Peg Fraser 的著作《黑色星期六》。本文分享了五首现成诗歌,每首诗歌都表达了灾难经历中的不同元素:它们分别是:"世界末日"、"走--滚出去"、"丛林大火"、"抵抗诗歌树 "和 "幸运"。与普通散文相比,这些诗歌的语言真实而脆弱,让人出乎意料地直观感受到丛林火灾的经历--恐惧、炎热、困惑、愤怒和损失。诗歌能引起人们的共鸣,吸引人们的情感,在灾害风险和气候变化传播中,诗歌作为基于艺术的知识翻译具有巨大的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Black Saturday bushfire disaster: found poetry for arts-based knowledge translation in disaster risk and climate change communication.

This research uses the arts-based research method of found poetry, the creation of poem-like prose from existing text, to share the lived experience of the 2009 Black Saturday bushfire disaster in Australia which killed 173 people. After outlining the processes, this paper applies found poetry to an existing text: Peg Fraser's book, Black Saturday. Five found poems are shared, each conveying a different element of the disaster experience: "Armageddon," "Go - GET OUT," "Bushfire Chook," "Resisting the Poetry Tree," and "Lucky". Compared to normal prose, there is an authentic and vulnerable vibrancy to the language of these found poems, which offer unexpected visceral insight into the bushfire experience - the fear, the heat, the confusion, the anger, and the loss. Poetry, which resonates and draws people in emotionally, has significant potential as arts-based knowledge translation in disaster risk and climate change communication.

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来源期刊
Arts & Health
Arts & Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
14.30%
发文量
12
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