Fr. 85.20

Tea Production, Land Use Politics, and Ethnic Minorities - Struggling Over Dilemmas in China''s Southwest Frontier

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 1 a 3 settimane (non disponibile a breve termine)

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Zusatztext "Hung is to be applauded for including 25 photos in the book ? . the insights about the villagers' adoption of discourses of suzhi! their sense of a contradiction between modernity and science! and their relationships with the merchants from outside make this an interesting and valuable book. Beyond the small audience of scholars who work on Yunnan! it will be significant to those who study the interaction between global commodity markets and rural communities in developing countries." (Joseph Lawson! Mountain Research and Development! Vol. 37 (1)! February! 2017) Informationen zum Autor Po-Yi Hung is Assistant Professor of Geography at National Taiwan University. His research focuses on nature-society relations, food, and agriculture in China, Taiwan, East Asia, and Southeast Asia. Klappentext In this book, Po-Yi Hung uses tea production as a lens to investigate the tension between nature and society under the market economy in frontier China. By focusing on the landscape of the 'ancient tea forest' (guchalin), this book aims to understand the interactions among tea trees, entrepreneurs, the state, and the Bulang, an ethnic minority population. Intensive ethnographic research conducted by the author examines local Bulang villagers' everyday lives as entrepreneurs in the market economy at a time of changing moralities and cultural renovations. The author explores the dilemmas that arise in this unique region between tradition and modernity, territorial margin and connected space, and nature and development. Zusammenfassung In this book, Po-Yi Hung uses tea production as a lens to investigate the tension between nature and society under the market economy in frontier China. By focusing on the landscape of the 'ancient tea forest' (guchalin), this book aims to understand the interactions among tea trees, entrepreneurs, the state, and the Bulang, an ethnic minority population. Intensive ethnographic research conducted by the author examines local Bulang villagers' everyday lives as entrepreneurs in the market economy at a time of changing moralities and cultural renovations. The author explores the dilemmas that arise in this unique region between tradition and modernity, territorial margin and connected space, and nature and development. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction 1. Tea Production and Dilemmas on China ' 's Southwest Frontier PART I: HARVESTING 2. Property PART II: PROCESSING 3. Quality 4. Hierarchy PART III: SELLING 5. Landscape 6. Ritual Conclusion 7. Production of Tea, Reproduction of Dilemma, and Remaking of Place ...

Sommario

Introduction
1. Tea Production and Dilemmas on China ' 's Southwest Frontier
PART I: HARVESTING
2. Property
PART II: PROCESSING
3. Quality
4. Hierarchy
PART III: SELLING
5. Landscape
6. Ritual
Conclusion
7. Production of Tea, Reproduction of Dilemma, and Remaking of Place

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