Human geography Books
University Press of Colorado Soils, Climate and Society: Archaeological
Book SynopsisMuch recent archaeological research focuses on social forces as the impetus for cultural change. This book, however, focuses on the complex relationship between human populations and the physical environment, particularly the land -- the foundation of agricultural production and, by extension, of agricultural peoples. The volume traces the origins of agriculture, the transition to agrarian societies, the socio-cultural implications of agriculture, agriculture's effects on population, and the theory of carrying capacity, considering the relation of agriculture to the profound social changes that it wrought in the New World. Soil science plays a significant, though varied, role in each case study, and is the common component of each analysis. Soil chemistry is also of particular importance to several of the studies, as it determines the amount of food that can be produced in a particular soil and the effects of occupation or cultivation on that soil, thus having consequences for future cultivators. The book demonstrates that renewed investigation of agricultural production and demography can answer questions about the past, as well as stimulate further research. It will be of interest to scholars of archaeology, historical ecology and geography, and agricultural history.
£999.99
University of Utah Press,U.S. Bridging the Distance: Common Issues of the Rural
Book SynopsisAs David Kennedy points out in his foreword, the West was once seen as a beacon of opportunity, and it is still a place where many ways of life can flourish. But it is also a region that leaves some people isolated both culturally and geographically. The essays collected here, the results of a 2012 conference, consider the problems and prospects of the rural West and its residents.The issues are considered in four sections—Defining the Rural West, Community, Economy, and Land Use— each with an introduction by editor David Danbom. They highlight factors that set the region apart from the rest of the country and provide varied perspectives on challenges faced by those living in often remote areas, including the shortcomings of rural health care, disagreements about theuse of natural resources, conflicts over water, and cultural divides within communities.Fresh, informative, and insightful examinations of the complex problems facing the rural West, these essays will spur conversations and the search for solutions.
£999.99
Catapult Dispersals
Book SynopsisA prize-winning memoirist and nature writer turns to the lives of plants entangled in our human world to explore belonging, displacement, identity, and the truths of our shared futureA seed slips beyond a garden wall. A tree is planted on a precarious border. A shrub is stolen from its culture and its land. What happens when these plants leave their original homes and put down roots elsewhere?In fourteen essays, Dispersals explores the entanglements of the plant and human worlds: from species considered invasive, like giant hogweed; to those vilified but intimate, like soy; and those like kelp, on which our futures depend. Each of the plants considered in this collection are somehow perceived as being ‘out of place’—weeds, samples collected through imperial science, crops introduced and transformed by our hand. Combining memoir, history, and scientific research in poetic prose, Jessica J. Lee meditates on the question of how both plants and people come to belong, why both cross borders, and how our futures are more entwined than we might imagine.
£21.60
Catapult Dispersals
£13.51
University of Arkansas Press Arkansas Travelers: Geographies of Exploration
Book SynopsisWinner, 2020 J.G. Ragsdale Book Award from the Arkansas Historical Association “I reckon stranger you have not been used much to traveling in the woods,” a hunter remarked to Henry Rowe Schoolcraft as he trekked through the Ozark backcountry in late 1818. The ensuing exchange is one of many compelling encounters between Arkansas travelers and settlers depicted in Arkansas Travelers: Geographies of Exploration and Perception, 1804–1834. This book is the first to integrate the stories of four travelers who explored Arkansas during the transformative period between the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 and statehood in 1836: William Dunbar, Thomas Nuttall, Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, and George William Featherstonhaugh. In addition to gathering their tales of treacherous rivers, drunken scoundrels, and repulsive food, historian and geographer Andrew J. Milson explores the impact such travel narratives have had on geographical understandings of Arkansas places. Using the language in each traveler’s narrative, Milson suggests, and the book includes, new maps that trace these perceptions, illustrating not just the lands traversed, but the way travelers experienced and perceived place. By taking a geographical approach to the history of these spaces, Arkansas Travelers offers a deeper understanding—a deeper map—of Arkansas.Trade Review[A] truly eye-opening volume, which lays aside the traditional travels of so long ago, and neatly places each excursion within two major themes—that of place and landscape. … Milson has given us a new way to examine these travels and the Arkansas Travelers themselves." - Maylon Rice, Fort Smith Historical Society Journal, September 2019"Andrew J. Milson reconceptualizes the Mississippi River Valley and the American South of the early American republic in his new work on travelers and explorers. Using the methodology of historical geography, Milson enhances our understanding of the region and its landscapes—both physical and cultural. In particular, he looks at the expeditions and travels of George Hunter and William Dunbar, Thomas Nuttall, Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, and George William Featherstonhaugh. Arkansas Travelers: Geographies of Exploration and Perception, 1804–1834 covers the thirty years after the Louisiana Purchase and gives readers a new perspective on Arkansas’s transition from territory to statehood." - Joseph Key, Journal of Southern History, May 2021"Anyone with an interest in the historical geography of territorial Arkansas will find this monograph indispensable. This work also is recommended for anyone curious about frontier travel and the life of American settlers west of the lower Mississippi River." - Steven L. Driever, Historical Geography, Volume 48, 2020 "Vividly written, Milson’s entertaining book will be a welcome read to anyone interested not only in Arkansas but also in the social, economic, and environmental history of the early nineteenth- century South." - Mikko Saikku, Journal of American History, June 2021 "Bringing together the stories of these four important early Arkansas travel accounts is enough to constitute a good book, but Andrew J. Milson’s perception maps help re-frame these stories — making us rethink the cultural and environmental commentaries that have so long occupied our attention. Arkansas Travelers is a welcomed addition to Arkansas history and to historical geography in general." - Brooks Blevins, author of Arkansas/Arkansaw: How Bear Hunters, Hillbillies, and Good Ol’ Boys Defined a State"Andrew Milson’s well-written and carefully-documented study of four Arkansas travelers takes us back two centuries to a time when the region was being newly transformed from a Native land to a freshly-settled part of the Euro-American world. Milson’s lively narrative—informed by his keen geographer’s eye—reconstructs an Arkansas landscape rich in environmental diversity, cultural pluralism, and commercial possibility. A must-read for any enthusiast of the nineteenth-century frontier." - William Wyckoff, Montana State University"That Andrew Milson is both an historian and a geographer is what makes Arkansas Travelers so special. Milson analyzes the journals of four explorers to tell the fascinating story of how two remarkably diverse European American and Indian peoples lived in early nineteenth-century Arkansas—the game they hunted; crops grown; their settlements and modes of transportation; skins, furs, and other products; and their many hardships. And through exceptionally clear maps, Milson shows the precise routes of the four explorers and the locations of the cultural, mineral, and botanical phenomena they discuss. This is basic research in historical geography at its best." - Richard L. Nostrand, author of The Making of America’s Culture Regions"Milson’s perspective as a geographer is made clear from his subtitle to the final page, but readers from a wide range of disciplines will be grateful for the clearly stated organizational framework and lucid prose he brought to the task. Milson is also to be praised for the distance he keeps, making explicit his understanding that his travelers were to a man spectacularly biased observers. With this study, Milson has lifted the scholarly examination of Arkansas’s earliest documentary records to a new level of precision and analytic sophistication." - Robert Cochran, Arkansas Historical Quarterly, Spring 2020
£999.99
Hendrickson Academic Christianity in East and Southeast Asia
Book Synopsis
£31.49
Bucknell University Press,U.S. Hemispheres and Stratospheres: The Idea and
Book SynopsisRecognizing distance as a central concern of the Enlightenment, this volume offers eight essays on distance in art and literature; on cultural transmission and exchange over distance; and on distance as a topic in science, a theme in literature, and a central issue in modern research methods. Through studies of landscape gardens, architecture, imaginary voyages, transcontinental philosophical exchange, and cosmological poetry, Hemispheres and Stratospheres unfurls the early history of a distance culture that influences our own era of global information exchange, long-haul flights, colossal skyscrapers, and space tourism. Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press. Trade Review“In eight wide-ranging essays by prominent scholars, this groundbreaking collection challenges how Enlightenment and long-eighteenth-century researchers need to reassess the interdisciplinary nature, cultural richness, and international scope of this topic. The study ventures into new territories in the international and cultural terrain of distance studies, uncovering uncharted research and future prospects in the digital humanities.” -- Mark Pedreira * Professor of English, University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras *“With his characteristic intellectual amplitude, Kevin L. Cope presents in this volume essays on the eighteenth-century ‘prospect’ in art and literature, the function of distance in Italian architecture, the European travel of two South Indian priests, the dislocations and adaptations of ‘long distance’ imaginary voyages, and the possible advantages of ‘distant’ reading—among others. While novel in its core supposition, the volume pays respect to an older, distinguished scholarly orientation that is perfectly in line with our own multidisciplinary moment: the history of ideas.” -- John Scanlan * coeditor of The Age of Johnson *Table of Contents List of Illustrations Introduction Part I: Best Seen at a Distance: The Art of the Far Away Looking Down: Observations on Elevation, Prospect Vision, and Eighteenth-Century Imagination Roger D. Lund Space and the Meaning of Distance in Bernardo Vittone’s Architecture William Stargard Change of Air, Change of Self: Long Distance and Human Adaptability in Imaginary Voyages of the Long Eighteenth Century Bärbel Czennia Part II: Culture Over and As Distance Distant Lands, Distant Races, Distant Cultures: Two Eighteenth-Century South Indian Priests Go to Europe Brijraj Singh Connecting Hemispheres, Playing with Distance: Rammohun Roy, an Indian Transnationalist Chandrava Chakravarty Part III: The Nature of Distance New Science, Distant Reading, and Distance as Intersubjectivity Rachel Mann Orbiting Iambs: Enlightenment Cosmology and Conveniently Condensed Immensities Kevin L. Cope Journeys to the Edge: The Idea and Experience of Distance in Archival Research Phyllis Thompson Acknowledgments Bibliography Notes on Contributors Index
£999.99
Bucknell University Press,U.S. Planet Work: Rethinking Labor and Leisure in the
Book SynopsisLabor and labor norms orient much of contemporary life, organizing our days and years and driving planetary environmental change. Yet, labor, as a foundational set of values and practices, has not been sufficiently interrogated in the context of the environmental humanities for its profound role in climate change and other crises. This collection of essays demonstrates the urgent need to rethink models and customs of labor and leisure in the Anthropocene. Recognizing the grave traumas and hazards plaguing planet Earth, contributors expose fundamental flaws in ideas of work and search for ways to redirect cultures toward more sustainable modes of life. These essays evaluate Anthropocene frames of interpretation, dramatize problems and potentials in regimes of labor, and explore leisure practices such as walking and storytelling as modes of recasting life, while a coda advocates reviving notions of work as craft.Table of ContentsIntroduction: Denaturalizing the Slow Violence of WorkRyan HedigerSection One: Questioning “Anthropocene” FramesChapter 1: What’s Past is Prologue: The Dragon, the Phoenix, and the Golden SpikeDavid L. RodlandChapter 2: Anthropocene Performance: Work without EndsTed GeierSection Two: Rethinking Work in the AnthropoceneChapter 3: Unfree Labor: Slavery and the Anthropocene in the AmericasRyan HedigerChapter 4: The Rise of the Novel and the Narrative Labor of Horses in the English Novel of the Early AnthropoceneSinan AkıllıChapter 5: Reconstruction Agrarianism in Douglass and Burroughs: Relational Labor Against White Supremacist OwnershipDaniel ClausenChapter 6: The Work of the Globe: How the Unisphere, Icon of the 1964-65 World’s Fair, Illuminates the Nature of Modern WorkJames ArmstrongChapter 7: Leisure and Light Work: Coming of Age in Wendell Berry’s and Thomas Pynchon’s Novels of ExtractionMatt WanatSection Three: Learning from Leisure in the AnthropoceneChapter 8: Walking the Line between Leisure and Labor: Dorothy Wordsworth and Harriet Martineau in the English Lake DistrictAmanda AdamsChapter 9: Labor, Leisure and Love of Country: Rangering in the Age of the Alt-NPSJennifer K. LadinoChapter 10: Learning to Play in the Anthropocene: Winter Recreation and the Politics of Climate ChangeWill Elliot and Kevin MaierChapter 11: Weaving “Lifeworkings”: Goanna Walking between Humanism and Posthumanism, Dharug Women’s WayJo ReyCodaPedagogical Anthropo/Scenes: Reviving Craft in the AcademySharon O'DairAcknowledgementsNotesBibliographyNotes on ContributorsIndex
£999.99
Nimbus Publishing Ltd Grand Pre: Landscape for the World
Book SynopsisIn 2012 the Landscape of Grand Pre, which includes the entire Grand Pre Marsh and portions of North Grand Pre, Hortonville, Grand Pre, and Lower Wolfville, was declared Nova Scotia's third UNESCO World Heritage Site. This newest addition to the Stories of our Past series details the area's physical and cultural evolution in an accessible, highly visual format. Grand Pre explores the interrelationship of the peoples and landscape of Grand Pre, from the legacies of the dykelands to the record-breaking tides of the Minas Basin. With a focus on the resilient first peoples of Grand Pre-the Mi'kmaq and the Acadians-the book explores the implications of the Grand Derangement, including the arrival of New England Planter and Scots settlers, the twentieth-century Acadian Renaissance, and the creation of the "Land of Evangeline." Includes informative sidebars and 50 colour photos.
£15.15
Demeter Press Maternal Geographies: Mothering In and Out of
Book SynopsisThis collection broaches the intersections of critical motherhood studies and feminist geography. Contributors demonstrate that an important dimension of the social construction of motherhood is how mothering happens in space and place, leading to the articulation of diverse maternal geographies. Through 16 concise chapters divided into three thematic sections, the contributors provide an account of motherhood and mothering as spatial practices that are embedded in relations of power across time and place. While some contributors explore how dominant discourses of motherhood seek to keep mothers in their place, others take up the notion of maternal geographies as productive in their own right and follow their subjects as they create a new sense of place. Collectively, the authors demonstrate that mothers are produced and regulated as subjects in relation to space and place, and also that practices of mothering produce spatial relationships. The scholars gathered here bring interdisciplinary approaches from diverse fields including women’s and gender studies, sexuality studies, social geography, sociology, anthropology, fine arts, literary studies, and film studies. Chapters include submissions from authors who reference the geographical contexts of Aotearoa/New Zealand, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, the Eastern Caribbean, Great Britain, Japan and Samoa, and the United States.Trade Review“Maternal Geographies is an accessible collection that brings together a diverse set of arguments via engaging styles of presentations. The Editors position the contributions within an interdisciplinary backdrop through which authors detail the spatialities of mothering. Instead of the well-worn trope of mothers facing challenges, each of the authors foregrounds mothering as a process, bringing refreshingly neoteric angles to understanding what mothering is all about. Contributions provide personal accounts of sculpting spaces for conventionally understood as `out of place’ mothering, offer novel readings of art forms that bring a sensitivity to the complexity of the lives of women who mother, and advance methodological queries into embodied research practices that extend well beyond the research topic. This reorientation away from the idealizations of mother and motherhood toward mothering as a process will no doubt affect the way researchers approach mothers and motherhood through the practices of mothering.” - Professor Pamela Moss, University of VictoriaTable of ContentsChapter 1: “Maternal Geographies: Mothering In and Out of Place” by Jennifer Johnson & Krista Johnston Chapter 2: “Reconstructing `Home’ Through Mothering in Japan: A Case of Samoan Wives” by Minako Kuramitsu Chapter 3: “May: Mothering in Space and Place, Painting and Poem” by Wanda Campbell Chapter 4: “Mothering, Geography, and Spaces of Play” by Laurel O’Gorman Chapter 5: “Spatial Practices of Care, Knowledge and Becoming Among Mothers of Children with Autism” by Karen Falconer Al-Hindi Chapter 6: “A Global Positioning System: On `Finding Myself’ as a Mother in the Romantic Landscape” by Elizabeth Philps Chapter 7: “Good Mothers?: Geographies of Sexualized Labour and Mothering in the Strip Trades in Northern Ontario” by Tracy Gregory and Jennifer Johnson Chapter 8: “PLACEnta: Finding Our Way Home” by Jules Koostachin Chapter 9: “Pregnancy, Gender and Career Progression: The Visible Mother in the Workplace” by Danielle Drozdzewski and Natasha Klocker Chapter 10: “Belly, Baby, Boundaries: The Effect of Pregnancy on Research Relationships” by Shana Calixte Chapter 11: “Fields of Care: (Auto)ethnography of the Politics of Pregnancy and Foodwork in Aotearoa New Zealand” by Emma Sharp Chapter 12: “Engineering the Good Mother: A Case Study of Opportunity NYC” by Carolyn Fraker Chapter 13: “Mothers Out of Place in Argentine Cinema” by Nadia Der-Ohannesian Chapter 14: “Geographies of Care and Peripheral Citizenship Among Mothers of the Brazilian Bolsa Família Program” by Nathalie Reis Itaboraí Chapter 15: “`Parce que sans ça tu les oublies, les chansons…’: Mothering Between Solidarity and Difference Through Francophone Places and Networks in Kingston, ON” by Laurence Simard-Gagnon Chapter 16: “LGBT Families and `Motherless’ Children: Tracking Heteronormative Resistances in Great Britain, Canada, and Australia” by Catherine Nash, Andrew Gorman-Murray and Kath Browne
£23.95
Verso Books Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-Made World
Book SynopsisFeminist City is an ongoing experiment in living differently, living better, and living more justly in an urban world. We live in the city of men. Our public spaces are not designed for female bodies. There is little consideration for woman as mothers, workers or carers. The urban streets often are a place of threats rather than community. Gentrification has made the everyday lives of women even more difficult. What would a metropolis for working women look like? A city of friendships beyond Sex and the City. A transit system that accommodates mothers with strollers on the school run. A public space with enough toilets. A place where women can walk without harassment. In The Feminist City, through history, personal experience and popular culture Leslie Kern exposes what is hidden in plain sight: the social inequalities are built into our cities, homes, and neighbourhoods. And offers an alternative vision of the feminist city.Taking on fear, motherhood, friendship, activism, and the joys and perils of being alone, Kern maps the city from new vantage points, laying out a feminist intersectional approach to urban histories and proposes that the city is perhaps also our best hope for shaping a new urban future. It is time to dismantle what we take for granted about cities and to ask how we can build more just, sustainable, and care-full cities together.Trade ReviewA damning stab at the subtle and overt manipulation of women in urban spaces. Kern's interwoven references to her personal experience through childhood, adulthood, and motherhood make her deeply researched and whip-smart work infinitely readable. Kern shows that the ability of all women to exploit the city fully is a valuable, necessary gauge for city worth -- Lezlie Lowe, author of No Place To GoThis original study of the gendering processes occurring in the neoliberal city is a significant addition to scholarly debate on cities and gender. Empirically grounded in the intricacies of the condo market in Toronto, it both adds to, and updates, the pathbreaking work around gendered critical urban analysis. An accessible and incisive text that will no doubt instigate future discussions -- Loretta Lees, Cities Group, Department of Geography, King’s College, London * [for Sex and the Revitalised City] *How do we begin to reckon with and ultimately reimagine our public realm in the #MeToo era? We can start by lifting up a greater diversity of experiences and voices that influence our thinking about what makes a place equitable, fun, accessible, safe, and dynamic for all. Kern's exploration is honest, timely, and intentional in acknowledging the work of women-fellow urbanists and others-in advancing the feminist city -- Lynn M. Ross, AICP, urban planner and feministThe next-generation urbanism book I've been waiting for! Leslie lays out a comprehensive guide to feminist world-building that our cities so desperately need. A must-read for all city officials and budding urbanists alike as we move into the female future of our urban environments. -- Katrina Johnston-Zimmerman, Lindy Institute for Urban Innovation, Drexel UniversityCities aren't built to accommodate female bodies, female needs, female desires. In this rich, engaging book the feminist geographer Leslie Kern envisions how we might transform the "city of men" into a city for everyone. Let's all move there immediately.' Lauren Elkin, author of Flaneuse -- Lauren Elkin, author of Flaneuse[An] insightful scholarly work ... This provocative analysis will resonate with theoretically minded feminists. * Publishers Weekly *This book totally opened my eyes! Feminist City is an incredibly incisive look at cities and urban design through the lens of gender, while also inspecting how acts of claiming urban space affect other marginalized groups. Combining academic and lived experience, Leslie Kern's intersectional approach clearly lays out just how cities are failing and what it might mean to imagine a more just urban life. Feminist City made me see my own experiences in a whole new light, and Kern makes the field of feminist geography completely accessible and exciting to the average city slicker. Anyone who considers themselves a feminist or activist should read this book! -- Julia DeVarti * Literati Bookstore *Approachable and based in thorough research ... In eye-opening detail, [Feminist City] argues that the privatization of security and heightened police presences endanger women of certain demographic groups, while marketers, who present condo living as the safest way to exist in a city, ironically turn women into accomplices in gentrification, forcing low-income women out of safer areas and into environments that are more dangerous. -- Tanisha Rule * Foreword Reviews *An optimistic, pragmatic book, which points to already extant solutions and looks forward to a more just, joyous urban future. -- Stephanie Sy-Quia * Tribune *In Feminist City, Kern imagines a world where public spaces are designed with women and equity in mind. * Bitch *Kern resists drawing a blueprint for a new master-planned feminist city. Instead, she believes we ought to take a closer look at how cities perpetuate inequality from the perspective of race, gender, ability, and class. -- Diana Budds * Curbed *An intersectional analysis of our urban environments through a combination of personal narrative, theory, and pop culture analysis. -- Leilah Stone * Metropolis Magazine *[Feminist City] examines the city's paradoxical ability to oppress and emancipate-how an environment teeming with gendered inconvenience, racial discrimination, and sexual violence can also be a locus of queer independence, community care, and emancipatory feminist world-making. ... Heavily researched but accessibly written, the book is a dynamic mix of high and low, facts and feelings, research and reality. * Hazlitt *Kern delves into the interlocking inequalities and systems of oppression that take concrete shape in cities, using an intersectional feminist approach to explore the gendered aspects of urban space...an enjoyable and accessible book that not only contributes to urban feminist geography, but to urban planning and policy more broadly * LSE Review of Books *Feminist City is brilliant because of the ways it lays out, quite clearly, the fact that cities are designed to discriminate in both overt and hidden ways and that it's possible to imagine something new-something that is more inclusive of different bodies and experiences. -- Evette Dionne * Bitch *[Feminist City is] a small but provocative book. It is both an introduction to feminist geography and to modern feminism, with its multiple meanings and numerous contradictions. ... In a world where the male gaze is so often the only gaze considered, so much so [that] most people don't even think of it as being gendered in any way, Feminist City is revelatory. -- Ron Jacobs * CounterPunch *Charting the physical aspects of the city that work against women, from inefficient public transport to a lack of supportive care networks for working mothers, Kern argues that there are ways to transform the city that would advance the liberation of women and marginalized people. ... Kern's analysis seems especially timely as we debate the role of police in our society and how we can better protect marginalized people. -- Nicole Froio * Bitch Media *Looking through the lens of geography, pop culture and public and personal history, the book exposes how female bodies are ostracised in urban spaces. * Refinery29 *Feminist City balances descriptions of our environment with the internal conversations or anxieties we feel as we wait for the bus, rush to pick up our child before daycare closes, and navigate space that's designed to keep us inside. -- Elizabeth Whitton * Greater Greater Washington *A joy to dip into * The Developer *There should be more books like this...Feminist City is wide-ranging and sophisticated, brief and engaging. * ICON Magazine *[Kern's] message is that thoughtful planners can and, eventually will, arrive at the feminist city as long as women's voices get the attention they deserve. -- Josh Stephens * California Planning & Development Report *A wide-ranging survey of social inequalities exacerbated by one-size-fits-all urban planning-inequalities ripe for improvement. -- Britta Shoot * KQED *Kern [wants] to envision a more inclusive city that considers the physical and cultural needs of its most marginalized members. -- Apoorva Tadepalli * In These Times *[Kern] introduces readers to a number of different ways the city is at once emancipatory and endangering. She deploys an intersectional lens to explore such themes as mobility, protest, adolescence, and friendship, weaving together an impressive array of sources from academic writings and popular culture (Doreen Massey appears alongside Two Dope Queens). -- Sophie Gonick * Public Books *Feminist City presents a comprehensive analysis of how people of color are the folks that make our cities work, and yet, they are not the folks our cities were designed for. -- Audrey Kalman * The Daily Emerald *Reminds us that our cities are moulded by male fantasies and designed to serve gender-based structures. * New Welsh Review *A good introduction to reading the city from a feminist perspective. * Urban Design Group *So much to digest here - cities old and new, politics old and new. -- Rosita Sweetman * Irish Times *Feminist City is a call for gender equity in planning (and for intersectionality), and it's one that planners of all genders should heed. * Planetizen (The Top Urban Planning Books of 2020) *Kern works to identify what a feminist city actually is as she pushes readers to thinkbigger, to think more radically, to think in terms of proactive world- and community-building ratherthan reactionary, incrementalist, or singularly policy-based world-adjusting. ... Feminist City provides a fundamental critique of contemporary society through a feminist and urbanist lens. Itshould be considered a significant contribution to both fields of study. -- Anna Parnigoni * Journal of Urban Affairs *An excellent contribution ... Leslie Kern's clear laying out of feminist urban theory and empirical work generates both a personal and critical understanding of the city. * Gender & Development *I was hooked by this deep dive into how women's freedom is curtailed by the design and culture of man-made cities - and how we can reclaim space -- Moya Crockett * Stylist Loves *[Feminist City] encourages people to look around their community and ask: Who are these spaces meant for? Who feels included and safe and welcome, and who might feel excluded, unsafe or even pushed out of the city? -- Vawn Himmelsbach * Wheels.ca *Importantly, Kern shows how sexism in cities is also inextricably linked to other systems of privilege and oppression, particularly racism, classism, homophobia and ableism ... a noteworthy book for our times * The F-Word *Essential . Kern an excellent example of a writer who wants to amplify marginalised voices . Feminist City urges women to take up space in their environments and not to be afraid of the unknown. -- Becky Little * Bright Green *
£16.90
ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc Spatial Management of Risks
Book SynopsisSpatial analysis is an increasingly important tool for detecting and preventing numerous risk and crisis phenomena such as floods in a geographical area. This book concentrates on examples of prevention but also gives crisis control advice and practical case studies. Some chapters address urban applications in which vulnerabilities are concentrated in area; others address more rural areas with more scattered phenomena.Table of ContentsIntroduction xiii Chapter 1. From Prevention to Risk Management: Use of GIS 1 Sophie SAUVAGNARGUES-LESAGE 1.1. Introduction 1 1.2. GIS and public security 3 1.3. Examples of applications for public security 8 1.3.1. SIGASC application 8 1.3.2. Application 12 1.3.3. SIG CODIS application 15 1.4. Prospects for development 18 1.5. Conclusion 19 1.6. Bibliography 19 Chapter 2. Coupled Use of Spatial Analysis and Fuzzy Arithmetic: Assessing the Vulnerability of a Watershed to Phytosanitary Products 23 Bertrand DE BRUYN, Catherine FREISSINET and Michel VAUCLIN 2.1. Introduction 23 2.2. Construction of the index 24 2.3. Implementation of fuzzy calculations 26 2.4. Application to the watershed of Vannetin: vulnerability to atrazine 28 2.4.1. The research site 28 2.4.2. Parameters of the watershed 28 2.4.3. Cell parameters 29 2.4.4. Fuzzy parameters 30 2.4.5. Representation of the indicator and of its related inaccuracy 31 2.5. Conclusion 33 2.6. Bibliography 36 Chapter 3. Agricultural Non-Point Source Pollution 39 Philippe BOLO and Christophe BRACHET 3.1. Introduction 39 3.2. Mapping non-point source pollution phenomenon 40 3.2.1. Mapping principles 40 3.2.2. Description of the research phenomenon 41 3.2.3. Mapping steps 41 3.3. Territorial database building rules 42 3.3.1. Choosing software programs 43 3.3.2. Design of the implemented GIS 44 3.3.3. Organizing and creating geographic information layers 46 3.3.4. Organizing and creating attribute tables 47 3.4. The data sources used 48 3.4.1. Identifying the available information 48 3.4.2. Soil-related data 49 3.4.3. Topography-related data 52 3.4.4. Land use-related data 54 3.4.5. Land planning-related data 56 3.5. Pollution risk zoning 58 3.5.1. Treatments to be performed 58 3.5.2. An example of risk zoning 60 3.6. Risk zoning applications 66 3.6.1. Risk knowledge applications 67 3.6.2. Spatial planning applications 67 3.6.3. Applications related to monitoring water quality 68 3.7. Conclusion 69 3.8. Bibliography 70 Chapter 4. Cartographic Index and History of Road Sites that Face Natural Hazards in the Province of Turin 71 Paola ALLEGRA, Laura TURCONI and Domenico TROPEANO 4.1. Introduction 71 4.2. Principal risks 73 4.3. Research area 74 4.3.1. Geological insight 74 4.3.2. Morphology of the research areas 75 4.4. Working method 76 4.5. Computer-based synthetic analysis and transcription of historical data and information collected on the research area 78 4.6. First results 80 4.7. Structure of computer thematic mapping 82 4.8. Application and use of the method 84 4.9. Bibliography 85 Chapter 5. Forest and Mountain Natural Risks: From Hazard Representation to Risk Zoning – The Example of Avalanches 87 Frédéric BERGER and Jérôme LIÉVOIS 5.1. Introduction 87 5.1.1. General information on forests 87 5.1.2. The protective role of mountain forests 88 5.2. Identification of protective forest zones 90 5.2.1. General principle 90 5.2.2. Methodology 90 5.2.3. Building up a synthesis map of natural hazards 91 5.2.4. Building up the forest map 102 5.2.5. Building up the natural forest-hazard synthesis map 102 5.2.6. Building up the map of socio-economic issues and vulnerability 103 5.2.7. Building up the priority areas for forestry action map 104 5.3. Perspectives 105 5.4. The creation of green zones in risk prevention plans 106 5.4.1. Natural hazard prevention plans 106 5.4.2. Transfer from researchers to users 107 5.4.3. The method used 108 5.4.4. Consequences of these works 111 5.4.5. Reflections and perspectives 111 5.5. Conclusion: general recommendations 112 5.6. Bibliography 112 Chapter 6. GIS and Modeling in Forest Fire Prevention 115 Marielle JAPPIOT, Raphaële BLANCHI and Franck GUARNIERI 6.1. Understanding forest fire risks 115 6.1.1. Risk 116 6.1.2. Description of the phenomenon 116 6.1.3. Particularities of fire risk 117 6.1.4. A spatio-temporal variation of forest fire risk 122 6.2. Forest fire management: risk mapping and the use of spatial analysis 123 6.2.1. Requirements with respect to forest fire risk assessment 123 6.2.2. Forest fire risk assessment and mapping: the use of geographic information systems 126 6.3. Using GIS to map forest fire risks 137 6.3.1. Forest fire risk assessment and mapping in the Massif des Maures (Department of Var): raster GIS 138 6.3.2. WILFRIED – fire fighting support (coupling GIS and model) 143 6.4. Conclusion 147 6.5. Bibliography 148 Chapter 7. Spatial Decision Support and Multi-Agent Systems: Application to Forest Fire Prevention and Control 151 Franck GUARNIERI, Alain JABER and Jean-Luc WYBO 7.1. Introduction 151 7.2. Natural risk prevention support and the need for cooperation between the software programs 152 7.2.1. The cooperation issue between the information systems 152 7.2.2. The various approaches aiming at facilitating this type of cooperation 153 7.3. Towards an intelligent software agent model to satisfy the cooperation between the decision-support systems dedicated to natural risk prevention 154 7.3.1. The multi-agent paradigm 154 7.3.2. Intelligent software agents 155 7.3.3. A proposed intelligent software agent model 157 7.4. Experiment in the field of forest fire prevention and control 158 7.4.1. Context of the experiment 158 7.4.2. The experiment scenario 160 7.4.3. First part of the scenario 160 7.4.4. Second part of the scenario 161 7.4.5. An example of problem solving 165 7.4.6. Conclusion of the scenario 166 7.5. Conclusions and perspectives 166 7.6. Bibliography 167 Chapter 8. Flood Monitoring Systems 169 Jean-Jacques VIDAL and Noël WATRIN 8.1. Introduction 169 8.2. Flood monitoring and warning 170 8.3. Situation diversity 171 8.3.1. Spatial information for a better understanding of the phenomenon 173 8.3.2. Spatial information for flood impact assessment 174 8.4. Technical answers 175 8.4.1. Hydrological observing networks 175 8.4.2. Data processing 176 8.4.3. The integration of acquired knowledge in the natural hazard prevention policy 178 8.5. Conclusion 178 8.6. Bibliography 179 Chapter 9. Geography Applied to Mapping Flood-Sensitive Areas: A Methodological Approach 181 Christophe PRUNET and Jean-Jacques VIDAL 9.1. Introduction 181 9.2. A geographic analysis of flooding 182 9.2.1. Intensity 182 9.2.2. Frequency 182 9.2.3. Extension 185 9.3. A concrete example 188 9.4. Bibliography 190 Chapter 10. Information Systems and Diked Areas: Examples at the National, Regional and Local Levels 193 Pierre MAUREL, Rémy TOURMENT and William HALBECQ 10.1. Context 193 10.2. Analysis of the current situation for the management of diked areas 195 10.3. Spatial dimension and integrated management of diked areas 197 10.4. Examples of information systems dedicated to diked areas 198 10.4.1. An information system at the national level for dike inventory 199 10.4.2. An information system at the regional level to analyze dike failure risks in the Mid-Loire region 200 10.4.3. An information system at local level for the integrated management of diked areas 203 10.5. Recent progress and perspectives 212 10.6. Bibliography 213 Chapter 11. Geomatics and Urban Risk Management: Expected Advances 215 Jean-Pierre ASTÉ 11.1. Towns, risks and geomatics 215 11.1.1. An overview 215 11.1.2. City: a much sought after security area 216 11.1.3. Risk: a poorly understood notion 217 11.1.4. Geomatics as a data structuring and management tool 217 11.2. Prevention stakeholders: their responsibilities, their current resources and expectations 218 11.2.1. Ordinary state or emergency state 218 11.2.2. Government and institutional stakeholders 218 11.2.3. Municipal stakeholders and the populations they represent 219 11.2.4. Operational and technical stakeholders 220 11.2.5. Insurance agents 220 11.2.6. Scientific stakeholders 221 11.2.7. Compelled to live with an identified risk 222 11.3. Today’s methods and tools: strengths and weaknesses 223 11.3.1. Urban reference systems and the expected connection with the digitizing of cadastral maps 223 11.3.2. Managing experience 224 11.3.3. Knowledge and modeling of phenomena 226 11.3.4. Monitoring phenomena 227 11.3.5. Reducing vulnerability 227 11.3.6. Risk assessment 228 11.3.7. Macro and microeconomic approach 229 11.3.8. The means of exchange of experiences, skills and knowledge 230 11.3.9. Consultation, public information, training and culture 230 11.4. New potentialities using geomatic methods and tools 232 11.4.1. Geomatics 232 11.4.2. Acquiring and structuring spatial and temporal data 233 11.4.3. Modeling phenomena and behaviors 235 11.4.4. Task analysis and support to complete and control them 237 11.4.5. Managing experience and knowledge 238 11.4.6. Quantified and hierarchical appreciation of the risks involved 239 11.5. Some ongoing initiatives since the beginning of 2001 240 11.5.1. Examples from Lyon: the information system of the service of Balmes and the GERICO project 240 11.5.2. An Alpine concern: avalanche risk management 242 11.5.3. Risk management and natural or man-made subterranean caverns, mines and quarries 243 11.5.4. The RADIUS project of the international decade for natural disaster reduction (Décennie internationale pour la prevention des catastrophes naturelles (DIPCN)) 243 11.5.5. Bogotá and its risk and crisis information system (SIRE) 244 11.5.6. The COEUR project in preparation between the Rhône-Alpine and Mediterranean cities 244 11.5.7. The Base-In project of recording Grenoble’s historical floods 245 11.6. Assessment and outlook: fundamental elements of future systems 245 11.6.1. Territory 246 11.6.2. Phenomena 246 11.6.3. Stakeholders 247 11.7. Bibliography 247 List of Authors 249 Index 251
£132.00
Reaktion Books Patterned Ground Entanglements of Nature and
Book SynopsisUnravels the entangled relationships between nature and culture. This title includes around 100 entries by leading names in geography and related disciplines that focus on various objects in the landscape - from beaches to battlefields, bees to horses, police stations to post-offices, trees to tractors.
£999.99
University of Pennsylvania Press Globalization: The Crucial Phase
Book SynopsisThroughout human history, the rate of world population growth overall has been outpaced by the rate of urban population growth. Right now, more the half the world's population lives in cities, and that proportion will only increase in the next fifty years. Rapid urban growth accelerates the exchange of ideas, the expansion of social networks, and the diversity of human interactions that accompany globalization. The present century is therefore the crucial phase, when the world's increasing interconnectedness may give rise to innovation and collaboration or intensify conflict and environmental disaster. Bringing together scholars of anthropology and social science as well as law and medicine, Globalization: The Crucial Phase presents a holistic and comprehensive understanding of the way the world is changing. The contributors reveal the changing scale of social, economic, and financial diversity, examine the impact of globalization on the environment, health, and nutrition; and consider the initiatives to address the social problems and opportunities that arise from global migration. Collectively, these diverse interdisciplinary perspectives provide an introduction to vital research and policy initiatives in a period that will bring great challenges but also great potential. Contributors: Nancy Biller, Christina Catanese, Robert J. Collins, Megan Doherty, Zhengxia Dou, Richard J. Estes, James Ferguson, David Galligan, Mauro Guillén, Cameron Hu, John D. Keenan, Alan Kelly, Janet M. Monge, Marjorie Muecke, Neal Nathanson, Sarah Paoletti, Adriana Petryna, Alan Ruby, Theodore G. Schurr, Brian Spooner, Joseph S. Sun, Zhiguo Wu, Huiquan Zhou.
£999.99
West Virginia University Press Feminist Geography Unbound: Discount, Bodies, and
Book SynopsisA field-defining collection of new voices on gender, feminism, and geography.Feminist Geography Unbound is a call to action—to expand imaginations and to read and travel more widely and carefully through terrains that have been cast as niche, including Indigenous and decolonial feminisms, Black geographies, and trans geographies. The original essays in this collection center three themes to unbind and enable different feminist futures: discomfort as a site where differences generate both productive and immobilizing frictions, gendered and racialized bodies as sites of political struggle, and the embodied work of building the future.Drawing on diverse theoretical backgrounds and a range of field sites, contributors consider how race, gender, citizenship, and class often determine who feels comfort and who is tasked with producing it. They work through bodies as terrains of struggle that make claims to space and enact political change, and they ask how these politics prefigure the futures that we fear or desire. The book also champions feminist geography as practice, through interviews with feminist scholars and interludes in which feminist collectives speak to their experience inhabiting and transforming academic spaces. Feminist Geography Unbound is grounded in a feminist geography that has long forced the discipline to grapple with the production of difference, the unequal politics of knowledge production, and gender's constitutive role in shaping social life.Trade ReviewFeminist Geography Unbound is a must-read for students and scholars interested in the diversity of feminist geographic thought, action, and activism. This is an exceptionally edited collection of leading scholars’ research and reflections on gender, race, sexuality, identity, vulnerability, and power relations. I highly recommend this book for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses engaging with feminist geographic scholarship and methods." — Jennifer L. Fluri, coauthor of The Carpetbaggers of Kabul and Other American-Afghan Entanglements: Intimate Development, Geopolitics, and the Currency of Gender and GriefTable of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction — Banu Gökarıksel, Michael Hawkins, Christopher Neubert, and Sara Smith Part I. — Discomfort across Encounters — 1. Brown Scholar, Black Studies: On Suffering, Witness, and Materialist Relationality — Pavithra Vasudevan 2. The Path to Radical Vulnerability: Feminist Praxis and Community Food Collaborations — Carrie Chennault3. Toilets and the Public Imagination: Planning for Safe and Inclusive Spaces — Rachael Cofield and Petra L. Doan4. Interview with Kumarini Silva Part II. — Gendered Bodies as a Terrain of Political Struggle — 5. "Real" and "Mythical" Bodies Weaving Social Skin: Two Waorani Women Disrupting Genres of Amazonian Humanity — Gabriela Valdivia, Kati Álvarez, Alicia Weya Cawiya, Manuela Ima Omene, Dayuma Albán, and Flora Lu 6. (Tiny) Houses and Black Feminist Geographic Praxis: Building More Humanly Workable Geographies — Tia-Simone Gardner 7. Decolonizing Development, Challenging Patriarchy: Colonialism, Capitalism, and Genders in Diné Bikeyah — Melanie K. Yazzie and Andrew Curley 8. Women-Only Spaces as a Method of Policing the Category of Woman — Abigail Barefoot 9. Interview with Petra Doan Part III. — Temporality and Feminist Futures — 10. Making Memory: Care and Dalit Feminist Archiving — Anusha Hariharan 11. From the Women's Movement to the Academy: Feminist Urban Planning, 1970–1985 — Bri Gauger 12. Challenging Anglocentric Feminist Geography from Latin American Feminist Debates on Territoriality — Sofia Zaragocin 13. Interview with LaToya Eaves Interlude: Calling All Collectives — Interviews with Feminist Geography Collectives — Jess Linz, Araby Smyth, Emily Billo, Winifred Curran, Roberta Hawkins, Beverley Mullings, Alison Mountz, Kate Parizeau, Margaret Walton-Roberts, Risa Whitson, Annie Elledge, Caroline Faria, Dominica Whitesell, Danya Al-Saleh, Elsa Noterman, and FLOCK Geography Collective Afterword — Lorraine Dowler Contributors — Index
£999.99
Rutgers University Press Aging in a Changing World: Older New Zealanders
Book SynopsisThis is a story about aging in place in a world of global movement. Around the world, many older people have stayed still but have been profoundly impacted by the movement of others. Without migrating themselves, many older people now live in a far “different country” than the one of their memories. Recently, the Brexit vote and the 2016 election of Trump have re-enforced prevalent stereotypes of “the racist older person”. This book challenges simplified images of the old as racist, nostalgic and resistant to change by taking a deeper, more nuanced look at older people’s complex relationship with the diversity and multiculturalism that has grown and developed around them. Aging in a Changing World takes a look at how some older people in New Zealand have been responding to and interacting with the new multiculturalism they now encounter in their daily lives. Through their unhurried, micro, daily interactions with immigrants, they quietly emerge as agents of the very social change they are assumed to oppose.Trade Review"Sure to become a classic of urban ethnography. A powerful and much needed account of the way in which older people respond to and negotiate change within urban communities. The research challenges views which present older people as 'victims' of global change, providing a highly nuanced description of both the perceived challenges of migration, but also the positive ways in which it is incorporated into new ways of adapting to social change."— Christopher Phillipson, coeditor of Precarity and Ageing: Understanding Insecurity and Risk in Later Life "Molly George’s book beautifully upends common assumptions about the widespread racism among elderly white Americans, Brits, and New Zealanders, offering a much more nuanced portrait of how ethnicity and migration are viewed by older generations. Examining everyday interactions between long-term residents and newcomers, Aging in a Changing World challenges stereotypical views of what it means to 'age in place' when places, and the people who occupy them, are in fact ever-changing. The result is a thought-provoking examination of multiculturalism as lived experience for the elderly."— Susanna Trnka, author of Traversing: Embodied Lifeworlds in the Czech RepublicTable of ContentsList of Illustrations 1 Aging in Times of Great Change 2 Global Movement, Everyday Multiculturalism, and Aging 3 Constructing the Field and Recruiting the Urban Stranger 4 “Then and Now”: Narratives of Change 5 Older New Zealanders’ Immigration-Related Concerns 6 A Surprise Twist? Older New Zealanders as Approachable and Accepting 7 Mentoring “Kiwiness” 8 Cosmopolitan Cadences 9 Conclusions Acknowledgments Notes References Index
£999.99
Rutgers University Press Erotic Cartographies: Decolonization and the
Book SynopsisErotic Cartographies uses subjective mapping, a participatory data collection technique, to demonstrate how Trinidadian same-sex-loving women use their gender performance, erotic autonomy, and space-making practices to reinforce and resist colonial ascriptions on subject bodies. The women strategically embody their sexual identities to challenge imposed subject categories and to contest their invisibility and exclusion from discourses of belonging. Erotic Cartographies refers to the processes of mapping territories of self-knowing and self-expression, both cognitively in the imagination and on paper during the mapping exercise, exploring how meaning is given to space, and how it is transformed. Using the women’s quotes and maps, the book focuses on the false binary of public-private, the practices of home and family, and religious nationalism and spiritual self-seeking, to demonstrate the women’s challenges to the structural, symbolic, and interpersonal violence of colonial discourses and practices related to gender, knowledge, and power in Trinidadian society.Trade Review"Erotic Cartographies is a significant and a very welcome contribution to the small but growing body of scholarship on same-sex loving women in the Caribbean. Through subjective maps, Ghisyawan teases out Trinidadian women’s articulations of identity, passion, friendship, and family, as well as how they resist homophobia and find spaces of safety and belonging. It is a finely crafted study that is theoretically and methodologically rich, clearly produced with much care and respect. A vital text in Queer, Caribbean and decolonial studies." -- Kamala Kempadoo * author of Trafficking and Prostitution Reconsidered: New Perspectives on Migration, Sex Work, and Hu *"Ghisyawan makes an outstanding contribution to Caribbean knowledge production in this profound and insightful study of Caribbean sexuality and same-sex desire. Through a much-needed focus on same-sex-loving women and space-making practices, she offers a unique decolonial methodology through subjective mapping and intersectional feminist praxis that demonstrates complex understandings of safety, visibility, place, identity, and queerness. Erotic Cartographies locates and affirms queer Caribbean belonging and spaces by examining lived experiences, creativity, spirituality, and erotic subjectivities that are fiercely and powerfully defiant." -- Angelique V. Nixon * author of Resisting Paradise: Tourism, Diaspora, and Sexuality in Caribbean Culture *"For Ghisyawan, the erotic is a kind of self-knowing that allows us to reshape space into safe havens, shifting and eliminating the boundaries of what it means to transgress, while also intuiting unsafe spaces and knowing the kinds of performances that become necessary around the potential hostilities of family members, friends, coworkers, and strangers. Ultimately, Erotic Cartographies challenges us to consider the role the erotic plays in our lives as what moves us toward decolonial spaces that are more than just safe enough. By allowing ourselves to inhabit our erotic selves more fully, we also allow ourselves to map the world anew." -- Jessica Díaz Rodríguez * Sx Salon *Table of ContentsList of IllustrationsNote on Trinidadian LanguageProloguePart I: Introduction and Methodology1 Introduction: Erotic Cartographies and the Decolonial2 Subjective Mapping: Queer Decolonial MethodologyPart II: Confronting Binaries: Space, Gender, and Social Class3 Being in Public: Queer Transnational Subjectivities4 Contesting “Home”: Unsettling Public-Private BoundariesPart III: State, Religion, and Personhood5 Religious Nationalism: Its Roots and Fruit6 “Dealing Up with the Spirit”: Spiritual Knowledge and Erotic Fulfillment7 ConclusionAppendix 1. Analytics Used for MapsAppendix 2. Bio-Data of Research ParticipantsAcknowledgmentsNotesReferencesIndex
£999.99
Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH Religion in Der Postkonfessionellen Gesellschaft:
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£77.90
Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH Fragmented Dhaka: Analysing Everyday Life with
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£85.50
Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH Living Translocality: Space, Culture and Economy
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£68.40
Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH The Spatiality of Livelihoods - Negotiations of
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£999.99
Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH Ethnic Constructs, Royal Dynasties and Historical
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£111.55
Austrian Academy of Sciences Press Vienna Yearbook of Population Research: Special
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£44.00
Austrian Academy of Sciences Press Integration Policies at the Local Level: Housing
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£22.84
Hirmer Verlag Kyrgyzstan: A Photoethnography of Talas
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£999.99
Universitatsverlag Winter Border-Crossings: Narrative and Demarcation in
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£47.50
Universitatsverlag Winter Transnational American Studies
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£76.00
Dr Ludwig Reichert Shifts and Drifts in Nomad-Sedentary Relations
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£98.80
Dr Ludwig Reichert Die Altturkenzeit in Mittel- Und Zentralasien:
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£141.55
NIAS Press Fragrant Frontier: Global Spice Entanglements
Book SynopsisSince its inception over two millennia ago, the spice trade has connected and transformed the environments, politics, cultures, and cuisines of vastly different societies around the world. The ‘magical’ qualities of spices mean they offer more than a mere food flavoring, often evoking memories of childhood events or specific festivals. Although spices are frequently found in our kitchen cupboards, how they get there has something of a mythical allure. In this ethnographically rich and insightful study, the authors embark on a journey of demystification that starts in the Sino-Vietnamese uplands with three spices – star anise, black cardamom, and cassia (cinnamon) – and ends on dining tables across the globe. This book foregrounds the experiences of ethnic minority farmers cultivating these spices, highlighting nuanced entanglements among livelihoods, environment, ethnic identity, and external pressures, as well as other factors at play. It then investigates the complex commodity chains that move and transform these spices from upland smallholdings and forests in this frontier to global markets, mapping the flows of spices, identifying the numerous actors involved, and teasing out critical power imbalances. Finally, it focuses on value-creation and the commoditization of these spices across a spectrum of people and places. This rich and carefully integrated volume offers new insights into upland frontier livelihoods and the ongoing implications of the contemporary agrarian transition. Moreover, it bridges the gap in our knowledge regarding how these specific spices, cultivated for centuries in the mountainous Sino-Vietnamese uplands, become everyday ingredients in Global North food, cosmetics, and medicines. Links to online resources, including story maps, provide further insights and visual highlights.
£999.99
L'Erma Di Bretschneider Italiotai E Italikoi Testimonianze Greche Nel
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£169.10