Some Things are not held together by Glue: Chunambo and other ‘Sticky Matter’ in Subtropical Macao, China

Q1 Arts and Humanities eTropic Pub Date : 2022-10-07 DOI:10.25120/etropic.21.2.2022.3901
B. Hodges
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article uses adhesives or what I am calling here ‘sticky matter,’ to illustrate multispecies relationships in Macao, a subtropical coastal region in South China. It focuses primarily on a traditional rammed earth material known as chunambo in Macao and other former Portuguese colonies. Composed of oyster shell, straw, rice, local soils and sand chemically bounded together by slacked lime, this precursor to modern day concrete has a unique combination of porosity and structural integrity that makes it particularly adaptable to tropical climates and a contrast to contemporary building practices which are often designed to create sealed interior environments. Discussions of porosity within New Materialism, Urban Studies and Chinese aesthetics will be used to think stickiness alongside questions of material integrity in the face of sea level rise, erosion and anthropogenic forces. Much like limestone sediments formed over the course of thousands of years at the bottom of ancient tropical sea beds, chunambo invites speculation about material permanence in the face of climate futures and a changing urban environment.
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有些东西不是胶水粘在一起的:中国亚热带澳门的Chunanbo和其他“粘性物质”
这篇文章使用粘合剂,或者我在这里称之为“粘性物质”,来说明中国南部亚热带沿海地区澳门的多物种关系。它主要关注一种在澳门和其他前葡萄牙殖民地被称为chunambo的传统夯土材料。这种现代混凝土的前身由牡蛎壳、稻草、大米、当地土壤和沙子组成,由松散的石灰化学结合在一起,具有独特的孔隙率和结构完整性,特别适合热带气候,与现代建筑实践形成鲜明对比,现代建筑实践通常旨在创造密封的内部环境。在新唯物主义、城市研究和中国美学中对孔隙率的讨论将被用来思考粘性,以及面对海平面上升、侵蚀和人为力量时的物质完整性问题。就像数千年来在古代热带海床底部形成的石灰岩沉积物一样,面对气候未来和不断变化的城市环境,chunambo引发了人们对物质永恒性的猜测。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
eTropic
eTropic Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
审稿时长
12 weeks
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