Across forest, steppe and mountain : environment, identity and empire in Qing China's borderlands
by
 
Bello, David Anthony, 1963-

Title
Across forest, steppe and mountain : environment, identity and empire in Qing China's borderlands
 
Environment, identity and empire in Qing China's borderlands.
 
Studies in environment and history
 
Studies in environment and history.

Author
Bello, David Anthony, 1963-

ISBN
9781107068841

Personal Author
Bello, David Anthony, 1963-

Physical Description
xviii, 336 pages : map ; 24 cm.

Series
Studies in environment and history
 
Studies in environment and history.

General Note
The multicultural Qing is reconsidered in "multi-ecological" terms of three borderland case studies from northeastern Manchuria, south-central Inner Mongolia, and southwestern Yunnan. Human pursuit of game, tending of livestock, and susceptibility to disease vectors required imperial adaptation beyond the cultural constructs of banners or chieftainships in order to maintain a "sustainable Qing periphery" based on these environmental relations between people and animals. The resulting borderland spaces are, therefore, not simply contrivances of more anthropocentric administrative fiat, but environmental interdependencies constructed through more "organic" and conditional relations of imperial foraging, imperial pastoralism, and imperial indigenism.

Contents
Qing Fields in Theory & Practice -- The Nature of Imperial Foraging in the SAH Basin -- The Nature of Imperial Pastoralism in Southern Inner Mongolia -- The Nature of Imperial Indigenism in Southwestern Yunnan -- Borderland Hanspace in the Nineteenth Century -- Qing Environmentality.

Abstract
The multicultural Qing is reconsidered in "multi-ecological" terms of three borderland case studies from northeastern Manchuria, south-central Inner Mongolia, and southwestern Yunnan. Human pursuit of game, tending of livestock, and susceptibility to disease vectors required imperial adaptation beyond the cultural constructs of banners or chieftainships in order to maintain a "sustainable Qing periphery" based on these environmental relations between people and animals. The resulting borderland spaces are, therefore, not simply contrivances of more anthropocentric administrative fiat, but environmental interdependencies constructed through more "organic" and conditional relations of imperial foraging, imperial pastoralism, and imperial indigenism.

Subject Term
Environmental policy -- China -- History.
 
Borderlands -- Environmental aspects -- China -- History.
 
Hunting and gathering societies -- China -- Manchuria -- History.
 
Pastoral systems -- China -- Inner Mongolia -- History.
 
Indigenous peoples -- China -- Yunnan Sheng -- History.
 
Ethnicity -- Environmental aspects -- China -- History.
 
Imperialism -- Environmental aspects -- China -- History.
 
Human ecology -- Political aspects -- China -- History.
 
Sustainability -- Political aspects -- China -- History.

Geographic Term
China -- History -- Qing dynasty, 1644-1912.

Other Variant Titles
Environment, identity and empire in Qing China's borderlands.

Bibliographical References
Includes bibliographical references (pages 277-319) and index.

Field 805
npmlib 10601432 10605239 (c. 2) GE190 C6 B35 ysh


LibraryShelf NumberItem BarcodeCopyMaterial TypeStatus
NPM LibraryGE190 C6 B35 2016106014321B*二館西文書一區
NPM LibraryGE190 C6 B35 2016106052392BBeing transferred between libraries