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首页> 外文期刊>Australian Journal of Botany >How many trees make a forest? Cultural debates about vegetation change in Australia [Review]
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How many trees make a forest? Cultural debates about vegetation change in Australia [Review]

机译:几棵树造一片森林?关于澳大利亚植被变化的文化辩论[评论]

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Environmental history, as it has emerged in recent years, is most distinctive in the way it illustrates a serious engagement between the disciplines of ecology and history. This article begins with an exploration of the lineage and promise of environmental history, particularly in the Australian setting. It then analyses a number of the cultural debates about vegetation change in Australia-about clearing, open landscapes, scrub encroachment and burning practices-and draws attention to the way that morals, politics and aesthetics shaped environmental perception and still do. Clearing was the dominant discourse in the history of landscape change and a legislative requirement for secure settlement. At the same time, criticism of clearing and its effects represented an early conservationist sensibility, but the heroic pioneering labour of clearing, the political imperatives associated with it and the escalating ecological legacy it generated, have sometimes made us forget how open was much of the Australian landscape when Europeans first arrived. The morality of clearing-the arguments for and against-focused the minds of settlers on the trees and the loss of them, while the aesthetics of pastoralism attracted their eyes to the grasslands and made them rejoice in the curious legacy of 'open' landscapes. In the early nineteenth century, the most common usage of the word 'forest' was to describe land fit to graze: 'according to the local distinction, the grass is the discriminating character [of forest land] and not the Trees'. At the same time, pastoralists were unwilling to recognise the role of Aboriginal people in creating such open landscapes and this reticence to acknowledge the Aboriginality of the pastoral economy persists today. This in turn affected the way settlers perceived the new forests that appeared after European invasion. The fate of the vegetation Europeans found has understandably been so much the focus of science and history-its removal, replacement, utilisation, modification and conservation-that 'new forests' easily escape scholarly attention; and being new, they seem far less valuable and threatened. They have generally been perceived as a nuisance, as enclosing and encroaching, as 'scrub', as 'woody weeds'. The politics of understanding regrowth are related not only to the issues of clearing and density, but especially to the culture of burning in Aboriginal and settler society and its implications for management and biodiversity.
机译:近年来出现的环境史,最能说明生态学和历史学科之间的紧密联系,因此具有独特性。本文首先探讨了环境历史的沿革和前景,特别是在澳大利亚。然后,它分析了有关澳大利亚植被变化的许多文化辩论,包括关于清理,开阔的景观,灌木丛侵占和焚烧行为的辩论,并提请人们注意道德,政治和美学如何塑造环境观念并仍然如此。砍伐是景观变化史上的主要话题,也是安全解决的立法要求。同时,对清洁及其影响的批评代表了早期的保护主义者的敏感性,但是清洁的英勇先锋工作,与清洁相关的政治要求以及它所产生的不断升级的生态遗产,有时使我们忘记了开放的程度。欧洲人首次抵达时的澳大利亚风景。清除的道德(支持和反对的论点)使定居者的思想集中在树木和树木的消失上,而田园主义的美学吸引了他们的目光,使他们为“开阔”景观的奇妙遗产而欢欣鼓舞。在19世纪初期,“森林”一词的最常用用法是描述适合放牧的土地:“根据当地的区别,草是[林地]的区别特征,而不是树木”。同时,牧民不愿承认土著人民在创造这种开放景观中所起的作用,如今人们仍然不愿承认牧民经济的土著性。反过来,这也影响了定居者对欧洲入侵后出现的新森林的看法。可以理解的是,欧洲人发现的植被的命运已成为科学和历史上的焦点-它的去除,替代,利用,修改和保护-使得“新森林”很容易逃脱学术关注。而且它们是新事物,它们的价值似乎远不及威胁。它们通常被认为是令人讨厌的事物,被包围和侵害,被称为“灌木丛”,被称为“木质杂草”。理解再生长的政治不仅与清除和密度问题有关,而且还特别涉及土著和定居者社会的焚烧文化及其对管理和生物多样性的影响。

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