"Spaces of experience and horizons of expectation": the implications of extreme weather events, past, present and future
“经验空间和期望视野”:过去、现在和未来极端天气事件的影响
基本信息
- 批准号:AH/K005782/1
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 108.14万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:英国
- 项目类别:Research Grant
- 财政年份:2013
- 资助国家:英国
- 起止时间:2013 至 无数据
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Predicting the climate of the future and determining how different communities might be affected by and respond to climate change has become an issue of global importance. There is growing concern over the impacts of interannual climate variability and anomalous and 'extreme' weather events such as droughts, floods, storm events and unusually high or low temperatures. While social and economic systems have generally evolved to accommodate some deviations from 'normal' weather conditions, this is rarely true of extremes. For this reason, such events can have the greatest and most immediate social and economic impact of all climate changes. Yet extreme weather events are as much social texts as material occurrences - as well as being biophysical events, they are also socially and culturally constructed and interpreted. Geographical context influences how individuals and communities experience the natural world. Different regional circumstances, particular physical conditions, an area's social and economic activities and embedded cultural knowledges, norms, values, practices and infrastructures all affect community experiences, reactions and responses to extreme weather. The impact of extreme weather may even vary between individuals, depending on a multitude of factors, which are in turn informed by cultural and historical experiences.The way in which an extreme event is experienced and perceived determines whether it becomes inscribed into the memory of a community or an individual in the form of oral history, ideology, custom, behaviour, narrative, artefact, technological and physical adaptation, including adaptations to the working landscape and built environment. These different forms of remembering and recording the past represent central media through which information on past events is curated, recycled and transmitted across generations. In this regard, experience or awareness of unusual or extreme events can effectively condition how people comprehend and respond to the problems of risk and uncertainty with respect to the timing and impact of extreme events in the future. The construction of regionally specific climatic histories and historical extreme weather events, and investigations of the memories of and responses to these events, must form a crucial component of any research that seeks to understand the nature of events that might take place in the future. These histories are also important if we are to be able to assess how different communities in different contexts might be affected by, comprehend and respond to future events. The purpose of the proposed project, therefore, is to examine the nature, timing and socio-economic and cultural consequences of, and responses to, climatic extremes in the UK. This will be achieved through a series of case study-based investigations across the UK and will cover an extended period between 1700 and the present. This study will employ a combination of archival investigation and oral history approaches in order to construct episodes of extreme weather and to explore whether and how these events affected the lives of local people and became inscribed into the cultural fabric and social memory of selected local communities within the case study regions. We will also explore how the recording of these events has changed overtime and is still changing.The project will work in concert with a number of non academic partners whose roles necessitate an understanding of the history of extreme events and their cultural implications. Specifically we will collaborate with English Heritage and the Meteorological Office through their Atmospheric Circulation Reconstructions Over the Earth (ACRE) initiative. The project will help both institutions better appreciate the cultural implications of extreme weather in the regions and communities within which they operate and the ways in which they might anticipate future impacts in their work.
预测未来的气候和确定不同社区如何受到气候变化的影响并作出反应,已成为一个具有全球重要性的问题。人们越来越关注年际气候变化以及干旱、洪水、风暴和异常高温或低温等异常和“极端”天气事件的影响。虽然社会和经济系统通常已经发展到适应一些偏离“正常”的天气条件,这是罕见的极端情况。因此,在所有气候变化中,此类事件可能产生最大和最直接的社会和经济影响。然而,极端天气事件既是物质事件,也是社会文本----除了是生物物理事件之外,它们也是社会和文化建构和解释的。地理环境影响个人和社区如何体验自然世界。不同的区域环境、具体的自然条件、一个地区的社会和经济活动以及固有的文化知识、规范、价值观、做法和基础设施都会影响社区对极端天气的经验、反应和应对。极端天气的影响甚至可能因人而异,这取决于多种因素,而这些因素又受到文化和历史经验的影响,体验和感知极端事件的方式决定了它是否以口述历史、意识形态、习俗、行为、叙述、人工制品、技术和物质适应的形式铭刻在社区或个人的记忆中,包括适应工作环境和建筑环境。这些记忆和记录过去的不同形式是中央媒体,通过这些媒体,有关过去事件的信息被策划、回收和代代相传。在这方面,对异常或极端事件的经验或认识可以有效地决定人们如何理解和应对未来极端事件的时间和影响方面的风险和不确定性问题。构建特定区域的气候历史和历史极端天气事件,以及对这些事件的记忆和反应的调查,必须成为任何寻求了解未来可能发生的事件的性质的研究的关键组成部分。如果我们要能够评估不同背景下的不同社区如何受到未来事件的影响,理解和应对这些事件,这些历史也很重要。因此,拟议项目的目的是研究英国极端气候的性质、时间、社会经济和文化后果以及应对措施。这将通过在英国各地进行一系列基于案例研究的调查来实现,并将涵盖1700年至现在的一段时间。这项研究将采用档案调查和口述历史相结合的方法,以构建极端天气事件,并探讨这些事件是否以及如何影响当地人民的生活,并成为铭刻在选定的地方社区的文化结构和社会记忆的案例研究区域。我们还将探索这些事件的记录如何随着时间的推移而变化,并且仍在变化。该项目将与一些非学术合作伙伴合作,他们的角色需要了解极端事件的历史及其文化含义。具体来说,我们将与英国遗产和气象办公室通过他们的大气环流重建地球(ACRE)倡议。该项目将帮助这两个机构更好地了解极端天气在其运作的地区和社区的文化影响,以及他们在工作中预测未来影响的方式。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(9)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
A Provincial Frost Fair: Urban Space, Sociability and Spectacle in Shrewsbury During the Great Frost of 1739
省级霜冻集市:1739 年大霜冻期间什鲁斯伯里的城市空间、社交和景观
- DOI:10.1080/0047729x.2018.1461748
- 发表时间:2018
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:0.1
- 作者:Bowen J
- 通讯作者:Bowen J
Extreme weather events: past, present and future'
极端天气事件:过去、现在和未来”
- DOI:
- 发表时间:2014
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:Bowen J
- 通讯作者:Bowen J
' The dreadful catastrophe that happened at Asterton ': a hurricane or an avalanche in Shropshire?
“阿斯特顿发生的可怕灾难”:什罗普郡的飓风还是雪崩?
- DOI:10.1080/01433768.2022.2064123
- 发表时间:2022
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:Bowen J
- 通讯作者:Bowen J
'A dreadful phenomenon described and improved': Reverend John Fletcher's account of the Buildwas earthquake of 1773
“描述并改进了一种可怕的现象”:约翰·弗莱彻牧师对 1773 年 Buildwas 地震的描述
- DOI:10.1016/j.jhg.2019.02.003
- 发表时间:2019
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:1
- 作者:Bowen J
- 通讯作者:Bowen J
Historical narratives of weather extremes in the UK on behalf of the Weather Extremes team
代表极端天气团队讲述英国极端天气的历史叙述
- DOI:10.1080/00167487.2016.12093990
- 发表时间:2020
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:1.4
- 作者:Endfield G
- 通讯作者:Endfield G
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{{ truncateString('Georgina Endfield', 18)}}的其他基金
Weathering the storm: TEMPEST and engagement with the national weather memory
抵御风暴:暴风雨和国家天气记忆的参与
- 批准号:
AH/R004595/1 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 108.14万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
"Spaces of experience and horizons of expectation": the implications of extreme weather events, past, present and future
“经验空间和期望视野”:过去、现在和未来极端天气事件的影响
- 批准号:
AH/K005782/2 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 108.14万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
'Snow scenes: exploring the role of place in weather memories"
“雪景:探索地点在天气记忆中的作用”
- 批准号:
AH/L50354X/1 - 财政年份:2013
- 资助金额:
$ 108.14万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
Weather walks, weather talks: exploring popular climate histories and futures
天气漫步、天气谈话:探索流行的气候历史和未来
- 批准号:
AH/L503502/1 - 财政年份:2013
- 资助金额:
$ 108.14万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
Weather walks, weather talks: exploring popular climate histories and futures
天气漫步、天气谈话:探索流行的气候历史和未来
- 批准号:
AH/K502777/1 - 财政年份:2012
- 资助金额:
$ 108.14万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
Cultural Spaces of Climate Network
气候网络文化空间
- 批准号:
AH/H03899X/1 - 财政年份:2010
- 资助金额:
$ 108.14万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
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