从复苏叙事中复苏:论全球主义、绿色就业和半机械人文明

Akron law review Pub Date : 2013-09-11 DOI:10.7916/D8057F34
Michael Burger
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引用次数: 1

摘要

气候变化从根本上破坏了作为美国现代环境法基础的传统故事和叙事结构。本文是采用法律与文学方法研究环境法的一系列文章中的一篇,它确定了已经开始在环境法话语中占主导地位的新兴故事情节,并将在未来几年证明其影响力。本文详细阐述了1)尺度的新观念如何重新定义人类对“地方”或“住所”的依恋,并塑造了关于什么是地方的新态度,给现有的联邦制计划带来了潜在的问题;2)美国将自然国有化的漫长历史如何在围绕能源安全、能源独立和“绿色经济”的话语中体现出来,这一话语与现有的基于地方的保护主义故事情节迅速发生冲突;3)气候变化的影响和适应需求如何能够产生对自然和文化作为一种半机械人的重新想象。文章最后指出了新旧环境故事之间的共性和区别,并反思了未来如何进行更彻底的变革。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Recovering from the Recovery Narrative: On Glocalism, Green Jobs and Cyborg Civilization
Climate change has fundamentally disrupted the traditional stories and narrative structures that underlie modern environmental law in the United States. This Essay, one in a series of pieces adopting a Law & Literature approach to environmental law, identifies emerging storylines that have begun to predominate in environmental law discourse and that will prove influential in the coming years. The Essay elaborates on 1) how new perceptions of scale are re-defining human beings’ attachments to a sense of “place” or “dwelling,” and are shaping new attitudes about what constitutes the local, posing potential problems for existing federalism schemes; 2) how America’s long history of nationalizing nature manifests in the discourse surrounding energy security, energy independence, and the “green economy,” a discourse which has quickly come into conflict with existing place-based preservationist storylines; and 3) how climate change impacts and the demand for adaptation can produce a reimagining of nature and culture as a kind of cyborg. The Essay concludes by noting commonalities and distinctions between new and old environmental stories, and reflecting on how more radical transformations may lay ahead.
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