地面流动性——在危机中走向混合网络空间

Q2 Social Sciences Maetagused Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.7592/mt2022.84.nugin
R. Nugin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

寂静与安宁是乡村生活不可或缺的一部分,有助于我们理解乡村。因此,人们普遍认为在农村时间过得很慢,远离紧张的城市生活。因此,流动性和运动(与速度和忙碌联系在一起)与都市化联系在一起,与乡村性联系在一起也就不足为奇了。即使是那些住在农村,花很长时间开车往返于工作和家庭之间的人,也强调和平、安静和没有喧嚣。这种形象影响着人们的日常生活决策、行动模式、地方发展和基础设施,以及塑造农村生活的国家政策。经常被忽视的是,农村地区以混合和广泛的方式与城市联系在一起,影响着整个社会的发展。本文分析了最近两次危机(COVID-19大流行和乌克兰难民危机)中国家和城市之间的网络。这些联系在危机情境中表现得淋漓尽致,表明城乡网络构成了一种混合的社会空间形态。尽管两者之间的界限模糊,但在话语和日常辩论中,乡村和城市的形象都被强有力地创造出来,为日常决策辩护,从而忽略了这些城乡关系的交织特征。这两次危机都提到了机动性的重要性——在这两次危机中,谁能搬家,在什么时间搬到哪里,都是至关重要的。在大流行的情况下,流动性的不平等表现在不同的领域——城市居民可以搬到农村(拥有乡村住宅是一种特权),谁可以远程工作(大多数是中产阶级的工作),谁可以去一个交通不便的地方(主要是岛屿或国内热门旅游区)。就乌克兰人而言,行动的能力也至关重要- -它包括离开乌克兰的可能性。即使在抵达爱沙尼亚后,难民的命运在很大程度上取决于他们所处的地点-要么是在大城市,在那里可以很容易地借助公共交通工具或步行,要么是在农村地区,由于缺乏公共交通工具,出行更加困难。在乌克兰难民危机期间,乡村世界主义在爱沙尼亚比以往更加明显地显现出来。一方面,小地方的民族和文化构成几乎在一夜之间发生了变化,因此农村地区变得更加多样化。另一方面,这一意想不到的挑战表明,农村大都市社区在许多方面是脆弱和不稳定的。值得注意的是,在冲突局势中,农村人(和平、安全)和城市人(危险的侵略者)的强烈文化建构浮现出来。另一方面,这种紧张关系表明,国家和城市通过流动性紧密地联系在一起。与此同时,流动性也影响了不动的人的日常生活。一个人的行动可能会影响另一个人的停留,以及人际关系、政治决策和生活安排。可以得出结论,农村地区由于各种原因正变得更加混合,它们通过各种形式的运动与城市联系在一起,这些方式乍一看可能不会被注意到,但恰恰在危机情况下出现。危机也凸显了这些债券的弱点和脆弱性,同时也凸显了它们的优势。农村人口及其流动模式塑造了日常实践和基础设施,正如农村地区的形象和话语力量塑造了人们的决定——无论大小。
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Liikuvus maal – läbi kriiside hübriidse võrgustunud ruumi poole
Silence and tranquillity form an integral part of rural life and contribute to our understanding of rurality. Thus, it is generally held that time passes slowly in the countryside, far from the nervous city life. Therefore, it is not surprising that mobility and movement (which are associated with speed and being busy) are associated with urbanity and stillness with rurality. Peace and quiet and the absence of hustle are highlighted even by those who live in the countryside and spend long hours in the car commuting between work and home. Such an image affects people’s daily life decisions, movement patterns, local development and infrastructure, as well as national policy of shaping rural life. What is often overlooked is that rural areas are connected to cities in hybrid and extensive ways that affect the development of society as a whole. This article analyses the networks between the country and the city in two recent crises – the COVID-19 pandemic and Ukrainian refugee crisis. It is argued that these relational connections surface vividly in situations of crisis and show that urban-rural networks constitute a kind of hybrid socio-spatial form. Although the boundaries between them are blurred, the image of both rurality and urbanity is powerfully created in discourses and in everyday debates, justifying daily decisions, thus ignoring the intertwined character of these urban-rural relations. Both crises referred to the importance of motility – in both cases, who could move, where and with what timing was of critical importance. In the case of the pandemic, inequalities in mobility manifested themselves in different spheres – which urban dwellers could move to the countryside (owning a country home is a privilege), who could work remotely (mostly in middle-class jobs) or who could go to a place with limited access (mostly islands or popular domestic tourism areas). In the case of Ukrainians, the ability to move was also critical – it consisted in the very possibility of leaving Ukraine. Even after arriving in Estonia, the fate of the refugees largely depended on the location where they found themselves – either in a big city where it was easy to move with the help of public transport or on foot, or in rural areas where it was more difficult to get around due to the lack of public transportation. During the Ukrainian refugee crisis, the rural cosmopolitanism emerged in Estonia more clearly than before. On the one hand, the ethnic and cultural composition of small places changed almost overnight, and thus rural areas became more diverse. On the other hand, this unexpected challenge showed that the rural cosmopolitan community is in many ways vulnerable and precarious. It is noteworthy that strong cultural constructions of rural people (peaceful, safe) and urban people (dangerous invaders) surfaced in conflict situations. On the other hand, the tensions showed how closely the country and the city are connected through mobility. At the same time, mobilities also affected the daily life of people who did not move. One person’s movement could affect another’s staying put, as well as interpersonal relationships, political decisions, and life arrangements. It can be concluded that rural areas are becoming more hybrid for various reasons, and they are connected to the city through various forms of movement in ways that may go unnoticed at first glance, but which emerge precisely in crisis situations. Crises also highlight the weaknesses and vulnerabilities of these bonds, as well as their strengths. Rural populations and their modes of movement shape everyday practices and infrastructures, just as the image and discursive power of rural areas shapes people’s decisions – both big and small.
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来源期刊
Maetagused
Maetagused Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: It is the only journal publishing original research on folkloristics, ethnomusicology, cultural anthropology, and religious studies in Estonian, with summaries in English. The journal has an important role in mediating to the scholarly community of one million Estonian speakers original studies and articles by foreign researchers specially submitted to the journal for translating. The journal also publishes translations of selected prime researches from scientific journals in other languages to elaborate specialised terminology in Estonian. In addition, the journal publishes articles on applied sciences, as well as reviews of books and audio materials, conferences and fieldwork, overviews of research centres in the world, defended theses, etc.
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