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Thinking Like a Floodplain: Water, Work, and Time in the Connecticut River Valley, 1790-1870.

机译:像洪泛区一样思考:1790-1870年在康涅狄格河谷的水,工作和时间。

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摘要

Residents of the nineteenth-century Connecticut River Valley learned the character of the river, and water more broadly, through their labor. Whether they encountered water in the process of farming, shipping, industrial production, or land reclamation, it challenged them to understand its power as both an object outside their control and a tool that facilitated their work. This awareness of water's autonomy and agency necessitated attention to how water's flow varied across timescales ranging from seasons, through historical precedents in working with water, and into the geological processes whereby the river shaped the contours of the Connecticut River floodplain and the valley as a whole. Communities mobilized this knowledge when explaining the limitations that ought to circumscribe novel water uses and trying to maintain the river's status as a common tool shared among diverse bodies of users. This converted working knowledge of water's flow into a political tool that both criticized and shaped industrialization. This dissertation asks how people knew the river as a common resource shared between independent communities and how the deployment of this knowledge---and the attendant political power that it carried---shaped the character of industrialization in the valley. It uses sources ranging from weather diaries to corporate records and municipal petitions to uncover patterns of local knowledge about water use and explore their influence on the politics of industrialization between 1790 and 1870.;The temporalities that people saw underlying geological, and seasonal variations in the flow of water on the landscape, shaped how they responded to interventions on the landscape such as the construction of dams or bridges, alterations to the channel, or changes to drainage. When assessing these proposals, people looked beyond the immediately visible consequences of these interventions on the landscape. Understanding how water had flowed in the past helped people to imagine how it might flow in the future, and this imaginative viewpoint on the landscape shaped everything from farming practices to the design of water power dams in the nineteenth century valley. To document these accounts of the flow of water in everyday life, this dissertation uses a variety of sources. When accounting for individual perspectives on the flow of water, it looks at weather diaries---which used the flow of water as a heuristic tool for understanding seasonal change. When accounting for societal perspectives, it folds in accounts of the valley's physical geography---which relied on information from ordinary people who understood water's power as a geological force. When examining the political ramifications of these perspectives, it uses petitions, legal complaints, and corporate records to understand how knowledge of seasonal and geological processes shaped the historical transformation of the river. With all of these sources, this dissertation uncovers patterns of local knowledge about water use and explores their deployment in the politics of industrialization and urbanization.;Ideas about water in the nineteenth-century Connecticut River Valley reveal the practices and politics of water use alongside how it shaped people's lives in practical ways. Their efforts at stewarding human entanglements with the landscape emerged from a perspective that envisioned a popular alternative to river engineering. Attending to how encounters with the landscape shaped perspectives on temporality provides a means of understanding how valley residents understood their river and its floodplain. In addition to its role in forming an environmental politics that shaped industrialization, treating public perspectives on rivers as engines of temporality provides a means of critically assessing key concepts in river history including watersheds, flooding, and the commodification of water.
机译:19世纪的康涅狄格州河谷地区的居民通过他们的劳动了解了河的性质,并了解了更多的水。无论是在农业,运输,工业生产或土地开垦过程中遇到水,挑战都使他们认识到水的力量既是他们无法控制的对象,又是促进工作的工具。对水的自主权和代理权的这种认识使人们必须关注水流量如何在不同的时间尺度上变化,从季节到通过与水合作的历史先例,再到地质过程,从而河流塑造了康涅狄格河泛滥平原和整个山谷的轮廓。社区在解释限制新水用途的局限性并试图保持河流作为不同用户群体共享的通用工具的地位时动员了这一知识。这将对水流的工作知识转化为批评和塑造工业化的政治工具。这篇论文提出了人们如何知道河流是独立社区之间共享的共同资源,以及这种知识的运用以及它所伴随的政治力量如何塑造了山谷工业化的特征。它使用从天气日记,公司记录和市政请愿书等各种来源来发现当地有关用水的知识模式,并探索其对1790年至1870年之间的工业化政治的影响;人们看到了当地地质和季节性变化的暂时性景观上的水流,决定了他们对景观干预的反应,例如修建水坝或桥梁,改变河道或改变排水。在评估这些建议时,人们的眼光超出了这些干预措施对景观的直接可见影响。了解过去的水流方式有助于人们想像未来的水流,这种对景观的富于想象力的观点塑造了从农业实践到19世纪山谷水力发电大坝设计的一切事物。为了记录这些关于日常生活中水流的描述,本文使用了多种来源。当考虑到对水流的个人观点时,它着眼于天气日记-它使用水流作为启发式工具来理解季节性变化。当考虑社会观点时,它会考虑到该山谷的自然地理-依赖于来自普通人的信息,这些人将水的力量理解为地质力量。在审查这些观点的政治影响时,它使用请愿书,法律投诉和公司记录来了解季节性和地质过程的知识如何影响河流的历史变迁。利用所有这些来源,本论文揭示了当地有关用水的知识模式,并探讨了它们在工业化和城市化政治中的应用。; 19世纪康涅狄格河谷的用水理念揭示了用水的实践和政治以及如何它以实用的方式改变了人们的生活。他们致力于防止人类与景观纠缠的努力是从设想出一种流行的替代河工程的观点出发的。着眼于如何与景观相遇形成对时间的观点,提供了一种了解山谷居民如何理解其河流及其泛滥平原的方式。除了在形成影响工业化的环境政治中发挥作用外,将公众对河流的观点视为暂时性的引擎,还可以提供一种手段来严格评估河流历史上的关键概念,包括流域,洪水和水的商品化。

著录项

  • 作者

    Taber, Jared S.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Kansas.;

  • 授予单位 University of Kansas.;
  • 学科 American history.;Environmental studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 362 p.
  • 总页数 362
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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