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Beyond the Green Myth

Beyond the Green Myth
Author: Peter G. Sercombe
Publisher: NIAS Press
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2008-03-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 8776940187

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This is the first comprehensive picture of the nomadic and formerly nomadic hunting-gathering groups of the Borneo tropical rain forest, totaling about 20,000 people.


Beyond the Green Myth

Beyond the Green Myth
Author: Peter G. Sercombe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2005
Genre: Hunting and gathering societies
ISBN:

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Interrogating Sustainability

Interrogating Sustainability
Author: University of California. IASTE/CEDR
Publisher:
Total Pages: 48
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

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Food First

Food First
Author: Frances Moore Lappé
Publisher:
Total Pages: 416
Release: 1980
Genre: Food consumption
ISBN: 9780285648968

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The scarcity scare; Blaming nature; Colonial inheritance; Modernizing hunger; The inefficiency of inequality; The trade game; USA - Breadbasket of the world; World hunger as big business; The helping handout: AID for whom; Food self reliance.


Interrogating Sustainability

Interrogating Sustainability
Author: Brook Muller
Publisher:
Total Pages: 44
Release: 2012
Genre: Architecture and society
ISBN:

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Monster Anthropology

Monster Anthropology
Author: Yasmine Musharbash
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2020-06-03
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1000182355

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Monsters are culturally meaningful across the world. Starting from this key premise, this book tackles monsters in the context of social change. Writing in a time of violent upheaval, when technological innovation brings forth new monsters while others perish as part of the widespread extinctions that signify the Anthropocene, contributors argue that putting monsters at the center of social analysis opens up new perspectives on change and social transformation. Through a series of ethnographically grounded analyses they capture monsters that herald, drive, experience, enjoy, and suffer the transformations of the worlds they beleaguer. Topics examined include the evil skulking new roads in Ancient Greece, terror in post-socialist Laos’s territorial cults, a horrific flying head that augurs catastrophe in the rain forest of Borneo, benign spirits that accompany people through the mist in Iceland, flesh-eating giants marching through neo-colonial central Australia, and ghosts lingering in Pacific villages in the aftermath of environmental disasters. By taking the proposition that monsters and the humans they haunt are intricately and intimately entangled seriously, this book offers unique, cross-cultural perspectives on how people perceive the world and their place within it. It also shows how these experiences of belonging are mediated by our relationships with the other-than-human.


The Life of the Longhouse

The Life of the Longhouse
Author: Peter Metcalf
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2010
Genre: History
ISBN: 052111098X

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The remarkable longhouses of Borneo remain mysterious. This book describes life within them, and puts them in their historical and ethnographic context.


The Peoples of Southeast Asia Today

The Peoples of Southeast Asia Today
Author: Robert L. Winzeler
Publisher: Rowman Altamira
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2010-01-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0759118647

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The Peoples of Southeast Asia Today offers an anthropological treatment of the ethnography and ethnology of Southeast Asia, covering both the mainland and the insular regions. Based on the proposition that Southeast Asia is a true culture area, the book offers background information on geography, languages, prehistory and history, with a particular emphasis on the role of colonialism and the development of ethnic pluralism. It then turns to classic anthropological topics of interest including modes of adaptation, ways of life, and religion, all illustrated with relevant, current case studies. Students will find well-supported discussions of subjects ranging from the development of agriculture and language dispersals, to fantasy and reality in hunter-gatherer studies, to disputed interpretations of Thai Buddhism and Javanese Islam, to ongoing government efforts to manage religion, create proper citizens, resettle and assimilate indigenous populations, end shifting cultivation and promote modernization.


Kinship and Food in South East Asia

Kinship and Food in South East Asia
Author: Monica Janowski
Publisher: NIAS Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN: 8791114934

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There has been a growing acceptance that food has an important role in establishing and structuring social and kin relations in South East Asian societies. This study looks at a wide variety of groups in the region and demonstrates that within all of them the feeding relationship is fundamental to the establishment and the nature of relations within generations and between generations. Presenting material from ten societies in the region, the papers included in this volume argue that the feeding of foods, drink and meals based on the focal starch crop grown by these agricultural groups - rice in eight of the groups covered here, sago in one and cassava in one - is used to manipulate 'biological' kinship and to construct a 'kinship' particular to humans; which is nevertheless founded in a 'natural' process, the 'flow of life', blessings and potency between generations.


Human Adaptation in the Asian Palaeolithic

Human Adaptation in the Asian Palaeolithic
Author: Ryan J. Rabett
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2012-08-27
Genre: History
ISBN: 1107018293

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This book examines the first human colonization of Asia and particularly the tropical environments of Southeast Asia during the Upper Pleistocene. In studying the unique character of the Asian archaeological record, it reassesses long-accepted propositions about the development of human 'modernity.' Ryan J. Rabett reveals an evolutionary relationship between colonization, the challenges encountered during this process - especially in relation to climatic and environmental change - and the forms of behaviour that emerged. This book argues that human modernity is not something achieved in the remote past in one part of the world, but rather is a diverse, flexible, responsive, and ongoing process of adaptation.