培育Ezo:日本百松时代的自主创新与生态变迁

IF 0.6 3区 社会学 Q1 Arts and Humanities Asian Ethnology Pub Date : 2015-06-30 DOI:10.18874/AE.74.1.04
Christopher Loy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了19世纪中期日本北部社会和生态条件的变化,以及这些变化对阿伊努人群体的影响。我利用该地区的历史来展示政治不稳定、文化禁令的变化以及影响北海道东海岸渔场的生态变化如何给在Chashikotsu渔场工作的阿伊努人在文化传统、行为规范和生存方式方面带来了一系列新的选择。我重点介绍了阿伊努族首领Chaemon的案例研究,他和他的追随者决定开展大规模农业,以更好地应对该地区捕捞量的下降。我把Chaemon的农业发展项目看作是一场“严肃的游戏”,旨在引导日本采掘业对生态、政治和经济的影响,以及进一步巩固其北部边疆的政治和文化政策。
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Cultivating Ezo: Indigenous Innovation and Ecological Change during Japan’s Bakumatsu Era
This article explores the shifting social and ecological conditions of northern Japan in the mid-nineteenth century and the impact these changes were having on one group of Ainu. I draw on the history of the region to show how political instability, changes in cultural proscriptions, and ecological change affecting the fishing grounds on the east coast of Hokkaido were presenting the Ainu working the Chashikotsu fishing grounds with a new array of choices in terms of cultural traditions, norms of behavior, and modes of subsistence. I highlight the case study of Chaemon, an Ainu headman who, along with his followers, decided to take up large-scale agriculture to better cope with declining catches in the area. I read Chaemon’s project of agricultural development as a “serious game” of navigating the ecological, political, and economic impacts of Japan’s extractive industries and the political and cultural policies that furthered the consolidation of its northern frontier.
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来源期刊
Asian Ethnology
Asian Ethnology Multiple-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
30 weeks
期刊介绍: Asian Ethnology (ISSN 1882–6865) is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal registered as an Open Access Journal with all the contents freely downloadable. Please read the information on our open access and copyright policies. A list of monographs that were published under the journal''s former names, Folklore Studies and Asian Folklore Studies, appear here. Asian Ethnology is dedicated to the promotion of scholarly research on the peoples and cultures of Asia. It began in China as Folklore Studies in 1942 and later moved to Japan where its name was changed to Asian Folklore Studies. It is edited and published at Nanzan University in Nagoya, Japan, with the cooperation of Boston University. Asian Ethnology seeks to deepen understanding and further the pursuit of knowledge about the peoples and cultures of Asia. We wish to facilitate intellectual exchange between Asia and the rest of the world, and particularly welcome submissions from scholars based in Asia. The journal presents formal essays and analyses, research reports, and critical book reviews relating to a wide range of topical categories, including: -narratives, performances, and other forms of cultural representation -popular religious concepts -vernacular approaches to health and healing -local ecological/environmental knowledge -collective memory and uses of the past -cultural transformations in diaspora -transnational flows -material culture -museology -visual culture
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