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23 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
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Uchiyamada, "The Grove is Our Temple"
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Untouchables cultivating trees on the periphery of the village.
models: core-periphery, patches |
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Knapp, Chinese Houses
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Houses as microcosms of environment, society, world. Houses are animic.
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Godelier
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alienable vs inalienable
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Teeler, The Flows of Trees in Japan
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alienable vs inalienable. foreign wood is a commodity, Japanese wood is highly valued. Japan is "world's forest eater"
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Zimmerman, Monsoon in Traditional Culture
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calendrics, ecotones. relates to Lansign - surivival through ritual
models: capture, resilience, ecotones, patches |
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Kurin, Indigenous Agronomics
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capture for all different species. animism - plants are like humans
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Gregory, Political Economy & Theology of Rice
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rice is a keystone species. poetry is about growing rice, poetry came from Buddhism. theology models ecology (capture)
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Shaw and Sutcliffe, Water Management
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oligarchy in control of water systems, dams - theoretical vs mechanical
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Hsu, Chinese attitudes towards climate
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different regions have different weather patterns and dragons. Ellen's supernatural animism.
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Knapp, Chinese house
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houses are microcosm of the environment, society, world. Chinese and Balinese houses are about orientation, Japanese about material.
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Ohnuki-Tierney, Rice as Self
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Japanese society is carving out sense of self through rice, just like they are in Knight with trees.
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Teeler, "Feelings and Forces Behind the Flow of Trees in Japan"
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alienable vs inalienable. foreign wood is a commodity, Japanese wood is a gift. carving out a Japanese identity through wood.
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Knight, The Second Life of Trees
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personification of trees, tree growth as family growth
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Ellen
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fetishism, keystone species
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Winterhalder
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patches
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Gunn
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climate, capture
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Johnson, Chumash
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Chumash chiefdomes were shaped by climate and ecotones. heterarchical exchange but hierarchical within chiefdoms.
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Wallerstein's world systems analysis
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core, semi-periphery, periphery.
West presided over development of capitalism |
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Dugmore, Norse Greenland settlement
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focused more on economies and patterns of trade causing Norse downfall in Greenland
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McGovern, Iceland
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leaders didn't understand climate change. captured knowledge was misapplied.
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McGovern, Management for Extinction
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Norse settlement failed for a number of reasons. 1. they were periphery, sending goods back to core. core market then changed. they were periphery with fake semblance of wealth, like plantation south. 2. didn't utilize Inuit captured knowledge. models: wallerstein, capture, resilience vs stability (mismanagement of resources - managed for stability = fail)
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Bray, Paths of Technical Development
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China and Asia went through different types of rice and rice paddy development. land is limiting in intensive agriculture with high productivity. east vs west, machines. mechanicion.
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Gende & Quinn, Fish and the Forest
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salmon as keystone species, ecotone, nutrient flow
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