Yangzi Waters: Transforming the Water Regime of the Jianghan Plain in Late Imperial China: China Studies, cartea 44
Autor Yan Gaoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 ian 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004505278
ISBN-10: 900450527X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria China Studies
ISBN-10: 900450527X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria China Studies
Notă biografică
Yan Gao, Ph.D., teaches in the Department of World Languages and Literatures at the University of Memphis. She specializes in social and environmental history of the central Yangzi valley, water history, and Asian environmental humanities.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Introduction Water, Society and Politics
1 Theorizing Water and Politics
2 Revisiting the Relationship between Water and Society
3 The Yuan
4 What Are Yuan?
5 A Long-term View of the Yuan
6 The Jianghan Plain
1Water-based Disasters and a Cultured Nature
1 The Amphibious Nature of the Jianghan Plain
1.1A Flood-prone Environment
1.2Wet-rice Cultivation and Its Significance
1.3Amphibious Living
2 Networks, Lineages, and the Creation of Yuan
3 Temple-Yuan Relations: Seeing a Cultured Nature
4 Conclusion
2Disordering Nature Wetlands and Empire Reconstruction (1600s–Early 1700s)
1 The Early History of the Wetlands in the Jianghan Plain
2 Crisis and Restoration
3 Migration and Opening the Plain
4 Amphibious Living: Fluidity of the Jianghan Lifestyle
5 Complexities in Administration
6 The Early Qing State and Its Laissez-faire Policy in Central China
7 Hydraulic Communities: Official and People’s Yuan
8 Enforcement on Collaboration: The Formation of Yuan Zones
9 Customs in Common: Various Solutions for Collaborations
10 Turn Sea to Land: Population Growth and Dike Proliferation
11 Conclusion
3The Retreat of the Horse The Manchus, Pasturelands, and Water Management on the Jianghan Plain (ca. 1700s–mid-1800s)
1 Manchus and Horses
2 The Jingzhou Garrison
3 Population Growth and Land Reclamation in the Eighteenth-Century Jianghan Plain
4 The Debate over Land versus Water
5 The Dilemma for Statecraft Officials
6 The Manchus and the Local Ecology of Central China
7 Efforts to Reinforce Manchu Cultural Identity
8 The Retreat of Horses in the Jianghan Plain in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
9 Conclusion
4Militarizing Water Forts, Polders, and Landscape in an Era of Crisis (1796–1860s)
1 The Rebels and the Jianghan Plain
2Jianbi Qingye: The Qing State’s Counterinsurgency Agenda
3 Fort Building in the Hubei Highlands
4 Local Militarization and the Lowland Communities
5Yuan and Tuanlian: Qianjiang County as a Case Study
6 Disruptions in the Hydraulic System with Local Militarization
7 The Rural Famine in the Jianghan Plain from the Late 1850s to the 1860s
8 Conclusion
5Coping with Environmental Crisis in the Post-Taiping Era
1 Post-Taiping Social Distress and Environmental Crisis
2 Managing the Waters
2.1Flood Control: Restoring, Diking, or Diverting
2.2Sedimentation: Ban the Reclamation on Mountains
2.3Sacrificing the South for the North
3 The Changing Nature of Conflicts over Water
3.1First, Greater Frequency and on a Larger Scale
3.2Second, Diversifying Stakeholders
3.3Third, a “Plebeian Culture” in Popular Action
3.4Case Study: The Conflicts over the Big and Small Zekou Outlets from the 1840s to the 1910s
4 Changes in Hydrotopography of the Jianghan Plain
5 Conclusion
6Centering the Plain
1 The Jinshui Reclamation Project
2 The Social, Economic, and Hydraulic Conditions of the Plain
3 Reorganizing the Yuan System in the Early Republic
4 The Nationalist Government’s Scheme of Unifying Watersheds
5 A Divided Central Yangzi Watershed
6 Hydropower: Centering the Yangzi
7 Conclusion
Conclusion
1 An Autonomous Water Regime
2 An Amphibious Water Regime
3 The Role of the State
4 Environmental Changes in the Longue Durée
4.1Hydrogeographic Changes
4.2Loss of Biodiversity
5 Hopes and Challenges in the Jianghan Plain
Appendix: Glossary of Chinese Measurement Terms
Works Cited
Index
List of Figures and Tables
Introduction Water, Society and Politics
1 Theorizing Water and Politics
2 Revisiting the Relationship between Water and Society
3 The Yuan
4 What Are Yuan?
5 A Long-term View of the Yuan
6 The Jianghan Plain
1Water-based Disasters and a Cultured Nature
1 The Amphibious Nature of the Jianghan Plain
1.1A Flood-prone Environment
1.2Wet-rice Cultivation and Its Significance
1.3Amphibious Living
2 Networks, Lineages, and the Creation of Yuan
3 Temple-Yuan Relations: Seeing a Cultured Nature
4 Conclusion
2Disordering Nature Wetlands and Empire Reconstruction (1600s–Early 1700s)
1 The Early History of the Wetlands in the Jianghan Plain
2 Crisis and Restoration
3 Migration and Opening the Plain
4 Amphibious Living: Fluidity of the Jianghan Lifestyle
5 Complexities in Administration
6 The Early Qing State and Its Laissez-faire Policy in Central China
7 Hydraulic Communities: Official and People’s Yuan
8 Enforcement on Collaboration: The Formation of Yuan Zones
9 Customs in Common: Various Solutions for Collaborations
10 Turn Sea to Land: Population Growth and Dike Proliferation
11 Conclusion
3The Retreat of the Horse The Manchus, Pasturelands, and Water Management on the Jianghan Plain (ca. 1700s–mid-1800s)
1 Manchus and Horses
2 The Jingzhou Garrison
3 Population Growth and Land Reclamation in the Eighteenth-Century Jianghan Plain
4 The Debate over Land versus Water
5 The Dilemma for Statecraft Officials
6 The Manchus and the Local Ecology of Central China
7 Efforts to Reinforce Manchu Cultural Identity
8 The Retreat of Horses in the Jianghan Plain in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
9 Conclusion
4Militarizing Water Forts, Polders, and Landscape in an Era of Crisis (1796–1860s)
1 The Rebels and the Jianghan Plain
2Jianbi Qingye: The Qing State’s Counterinsurgency Agenda
3 Fort Building in the Hubei Highlands
4 Local Militarization and the Lowland Communities
5Yuan and Tuanlian: Qianjiang County as a Case Study
6 Disruptions in the Hydraulic System with Local Militarization
7 The Rural Famine in the Jianghan Plain from the Late 1850s to the 1860s
8 Conclusion
5Coping with Environmental Crisis in the Post-Taiping Era
1 Post-Taiping Social Distress and Environmental Crisis
2 Managing the Waters
2.1Flood Control: Restoring, Diking, or Diverting
2.2Sedimentation: Ban the Reclamation on Mountains
2.3Sacrificing the South for the North
3 The Changing Nature of Conflicts over Water
3.1First, Greater Frequency and on a Larger Scale
3.2Second, Diversifying Stakeholders
3.3Third, a “Plebeian Culture” in Popular Action
3.4Case Study: The Conflicts over the Big and Small Zekou Outlets from the 1840s to the 1910s
4 Changes in Hydrotopography of the Jianghan Plain
5 Conclusion
6Centering the Plain
1 The Jinshui Reclamation Project
2 The Social, Economic, and Hydraulic Conditions of the Plain
3 Reorganizing the Yuan System in the Early Republic
4 The Nationalist Government’s Scheme of Unifying Watersheds
5 A Divided Central Yangzi Watershed
6 Hydropower: Centering the Yangzi
7 Conclusion
Conclusion
1 An Autonomous Water Regime
2 An Amphibious Water Regime
3 The Role of the State
4 Environmental Changes in the Longue Durée
4.1Hydrogeographic Changes
4.2Loss of Biodiversity
5 Hopes and Challenges in the Jianghan Plain
Appendix: Glossary of Chinese Measurement Terms
Works Cited
Index
Recenzii
"As a historial monograph Yangzi Waters is firmly based on a combination of clearly explained theory and well-picked, original material from local sources. This interesting study should not only be read by China specialists but should also appeal to historians interested in a comparative approach of water management within a global setting."
-Leonard Blussé, Leiden University, International Journal of Maritime History, 35(1)
-Leonard Blussé, Leiden University, International Journal of Maritime History, 35(1)