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Title The cultivated forest : people and woodlands in Asian history / edited by Ian M. Miller, Bradly Camp Davis, Brian Lander, and John S. Lee.

Publication Info. Seattle : University of Washington Press, [2022]

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (unpaged) : illustrations, maps
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction: The Cultivated Forest / Ian M. Miller, Bradley Camp Davis and John S. Lee -- Deforestation and Wood Scarcity in Early China / Brian Lander -- Forestry by Contract: Knowledge, Ownership, and the Written Record in South China / Ian M. Miller -- Fighting over Nature: Resource Disputes in Central Japan During an Age of Instability, 1475-1635 / John Elijah Bender -- The Sylvan Local: The Pine Protection Kye in Late Chosŏn Korea, 1700-1900 / John S. Lee -- Frontier Timber in Southwest China: Market, Empire, and Identity -- / Meng Zhang -- Splintered Habitats: The Fragmentation of Ecotone Northern China's Imperial Woodland Complexes / David A. Bello -- Camphor, Celluloid, and Colonialism: The Dutch East Indies and Colonial Taiwan in Comparative Perspective / Faizah Zakaria -- Modern Trees for Backward China: Arbor Day and the Struggle Against Ecological "Backwardness" in Republican China, 1911-1937 / Larissa Pitts -- Sunny Slopes Are Good for Grain, Shady Slopes Are Good for Trees: Nuosu Yi Agroforestry in Southwestern Sichuan / Stevan Harrell, Amanda H. Schmidt, Brian D. Collins, R. Keala Hagmann, and Thomas M. Hinckley.
Summary "Modern understandings of forest ecology first emerged in the nineteenth century from forestry schools in Europe and North America. Until recently, Asia was sidelined in histories of wood and woodland. To bring Asia's own cultivation of forests into focus, this volume presents scholarship that considers the different roles that wood and woodlands have played in the histories of East and Southeast Asian regions, promising to transform how we understand the broader histories of Asia and the environment. Considering the types of woodlands found in Asia, from the tropical forests of Sumatra to the boreal forests of Manchuria, contributors explore the range of uses for these sites, the dynamics of wood dispute resolution, and the distinctive institutions that emerged from them. Chapter topics include perspectives on human woodland use and modification based on recent archaeological work; changes in the resolution of water and wood resource claims; and how ethnic minorities have claimed their identity as forest people as a way of protecting their lumber market position. By demonstration that across East and Southeast Asia forests were sites of exploitation, contestation, and ritual in Asia just as they were in Europe and America, this volume places them in conversation with world forest history"-- Provided by publisher.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Forests and forestry -- East Asia -- History.
Forests and forestry.
East Asia.
History.
Forests and forestry -- Southeast Asia -- History.
Southeast Asia.
Forests and forestry -- History.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
History.
Added Author Miller, Ian Matthew, editor.
Davis, Bradley Camp, editor.
Lander, Brian, editor.
Lee, John S. (Researcher in Korean environmental history), editor.
Added Title People and woodlands in Asian history
Other Form: Print version: Cultivated forest Seattle : University of Washington Press, [2022] 9780295750903 (DLC) 2022015132
ISBN 9780295750910 electronic book
029575091X electronic book
9780295750903 hardcover
9780295751320 hardcover
Standard No. 303231336