气候变化是一个事件

IF 2 2区 社会学 0 LITERATURE
Iddo Tavory , Robin Wagner-Pacifici
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引用次数: 9

摘要

气候变化是什么样的事件?事件的理论不可避免地从断裂开始。一个事件取决于经验,即地面发生了巨大的变化。然而,气候变化破裂的模糊性——这在任何一个实例中都不可能经历——使得气候变化的应用更加困难。此外,它是一个由参与者如何看待未来展开的事件,以及它的现在或过去所定义的事件。将事件理论与未来创造理论联系在一起,我们将重点放在当前气候变化辩论中发现的三种重要的事件形式:事件的科学模式,灭绝叛乱等团体的激进事件,以及我们称之为“明智的”欧盟和联合国官员的事件,因为它是从气候变化文件中收集的,如欧洲绿色协议。正如我们所展示的,每一种形式的事件构建了一个不同的时间景观,由不同的演员和行动组成,对未来和不同类型的项目有不同的立场。通过关注每种形式内部的紧张关系,我们表明,了解这些形式的重大事件也有助于我们了解不同行为者如何将气候变化与其他事件(如全球Covid-19流行病)融合在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate change as an event

What kind of event is climate change? Theories of events inevitably begin with rupture. An event depends on the experience that the ground has dramatically shifted. Yet the ambiguity of rupture in climate change—which cannot be experienced in any one instance—makes climate change more difficult to emplot. Moreover, it is an event defined as much by how actors see the future unfolding as by its present or past. Tying the theory of events with that of future-making, we focus on three important forms of eventfulness that we find in the current climate change debate: scientific modes of eventfulness, the radical eventfulness of groups such as Extinction Rebellion, and what we call the “sensible” eventfulness of European Union and United Nations functionaries, as it is gleaned from climate change documents such as the European Green Deal. As we show, each form of eventfulness constructs a different temporal landscape, populated by different actors and actions, entailing different stances towards the future and different kinds of projects. Focusing on the tensions within each form, we then show that understanding these forms of eventfulness can also help us understand how different actors fused climate change to other events, such as that of the global Covid-19 epidemic.

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来源期刊
Poetics
Poetics Multiple-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
16.00%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: Poetics is an interdisciplinary journal of theoretical and empirical research on culture, the media and the arts. Particularly welcome are papers that make an original contribution to the major disciplines - sociology, psychology, media and communication studies, and economics - within which promising lines of research on culture, media and the arts have been developed.
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