核环境的演变:从紫禁园到核景观纪念碑

Linda Grisoli, JieXi Goh
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摘要

人类世的黎明见证了核景观(NL)的诞生:被放射性严重污染的地方,被人类干预留下。从核武器生产到爆炸地点和原子能发电厂,不幸的事件导致了环境灾难,把这些核实验室变成了禁苑——废物的禁区。人类的缺席促使NL蜕变为后核景观,其特征是自然的原始形象:原始和自然。它是一种未被释放的荒野,是人类生态灭绝的活档案。后来,政府的干预逐渐将这些遗址转变为核景观纪念碑(NLM),使其成为退化和救赎的体现。本文研究了这些核环境的演变及其野性的矛盾性质。它通过原子叙事进一步阐明了人类对自然态度的转变:从生产和破坏到恢复与和解。本文还强调了人为和自然机构在建立人类与非人类之间复杂的共存关系中的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evolution of Nuclear Environments: From Forbidden Gardens to Nuclear Landscape Monuments
The dawn of Anthropocene saw the birth of nuclear landscapes (NL): places heavily contaminated by radioactivity, left behind by human interventions. From nuclear weapon production to detonation sites and atomic power plants, unfortunate events had resulted in environmental catastrophes, turning these NLs into forbidden gardens - off-limits frontiers of waste. Human absence promoted NL to metamorphose into post-nuclear landscapes, characterized by a primal image of nature: pristine and spontaneous. It is an unreleased kind of wilderness, a living archive of human ecocides. Later, governmental interventions gradually transformed these sites into Nuclear Landscape Monuments (NLM), making them embodiments of degradation and redemption. The essay investigates the evolution of these nuclear environments and their wild ambivalent nature. It further elucidates the shift in humans’ attitudes towards nature, through an atomic narrative: from production and destruction to recovery and reconciliation. The essay also highlights the role of anthropogenic and natural agencies in establishing this intricate co-existing relationship between humans and non-humans.
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