Assembling a thermal rhythmanalysis: Energetic flows, heat stress and polyrhythmic interactions in the context of climate change

被引:19
作者
Oppermann, Elspeth [1 ,2 ]
Walker, Gordon [3 ]
Brearley, Matt [2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Ludwig Maximilians Univ Munchen, Dept Geog, Lehrstuhl Mensch Umwelt Beziehungen, Luisenstr 37,Raum A 310, D-80333 Munich, Germany
[2] Charles Darwin Univ, Northern Inst, Darwin, NT 0909, Australia
[3] Univ Lancaster, Lancaster Environm Ctr, Farrer Ave, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, England
[4] Thermal Hyperformance, POB 1356, Howard Springs, NT 0835, Australia
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
TIME; ADAPTATION; ACCLIMATIZATION; ENVIRONMENT; WORKING; RHYTHMS; POVERTY; WORKERS; ROUTES; SENSE;
D O I
10.1016/j.geoforum.2019.09.012
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Rhythmanalysis, as developed by Lefebvre and Regulier, has provided theoretical and methodological inspiration for a growing diversity of work in geography. We focus on the energetic liveliness and agency of rhythm to engage with heat as an energetic form and heat stress as a threat to bodily health that is becoming intensified with climate change. We deploy the analytical vocabulary of rhythmanalysis to conceptualize and empirically trace how heterogeneous, polyrhythmic interactions play out in space and time as energetic-thermal flows are variously exchanged, accumulated and dispersed within and around human bodies. At the empirical site of an 'open-cut' mine in northern Australia, where labour is physically intense, intrinsically hazardous and thermally at the threshold of embodied capacities to function, we develop a distinctive interdisciplinary analysis of rhythms of the thermal environment; rhythmic patterns in the choreography of labour and production; and corporeal rhythms in working bodies. Combining thermal physiology, ethnography and environmental monitoring methods to reveal these interacting rhythms, we identify how polyrhythmic thermal entanglements produce and shape the management of heat stress, and their significance for movements between 'eurhythmic' and 'arrhythmic' conditions. The case study pushes these terms to their limits, so we propose 'dysrhythmic' as a new adjective for the rhythmanalytic lexicon that enables greater analytical traction on the components of polyrhythmic assemblages. Beyond the specific problem of managing heat stress, we argue there is much insight to be gained from bringing rhythmanalysis into geographical engagements with the temporalities of adaptation in a changing global climate.
引用
收藏
页码:275 / 285
页数:11
相关论文
共 65 条
[31]   "Because You Got to Have Heat": The Networked Assemblage of Energy Poverty in Eastern North Carolina [J].
Harrison, Conor ;
Popke, Jeff .
ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS, 2011, 101 (04) :949-961
[32]   Rhythm Returns: Movement and Cultural Theory [J].
Henriques, Julian ;
Tiainen, Milla ;
Vaeliaho, Pasi .
BODY & SOCIETY, 2014, 20 (3-4) :3-29
[33]   AIR CONDITIONING AND THE MATERIAL CULTURE OF ROUTINE HUMAN ENCASEMENT The Case of Young People in Contemporary Singapore [J].
Hitchings, Russell ;
Lee, Shu Jun .
JOURNAL OF MATERIAL CULTURE, 2008, 13 (03) :251-265
[34]   Researching air-conditioning addiction and ways of puncturing practice: professional office workers and the decision to go outside [J].
Hitchings, Russell .
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A, 2011, 43 (12) :2838-2856
[35]  
Hulme Mike., 2017, Weathered. Cultures of Climate, V1, DOI 10.4135/9781473957749
[36]  
Jablonski N.G., 2013, SKIN NATURAL HIST
[38]   Lunar-solar rhythmpatterns: towards the material cultures of tides [J].
Jones, Owain .
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE, 2011, 43 (10) :2285-2303
[39]   To the rhythm of shoppingon synchronisation in urban landscapes of consumption [J].
Karrholm, Mattias .
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY, 2009, 10 (04) :421-440
[40]   Rhythmanalytical sketches: agencies, school journeys, temporalities [J].
Kullman, Kim ;
Palludan, Charlotte .
CHILDRENS GEOGRAPHIES, 2011, 9 (3-4) :347-359