ABSTRACT

The dramatic transformation of our planet by human actions has been heralded as the coming of the new epoch of the Anthropocene. Human relations with water raise some of the most urgent questions in this regard. The starting point of this book is that these changes should not be seen as the result of monolithic actions of an undifferentiated humanity, but as emerging from diverse ways of relating to water in a variety of settings and knowledge systems. 

With its large population and rapid demographic and socioeconomic change, Asia provides an ideal context for examining how varied forms of knowledge pertaining to water encounter and intermingle with one another. While it is difficult to carry out comprehensive research on water knowledge in Asia due to its linguistic, political and cultural fragmentation, the topic nevertheless has relevance across boundaries. By using a carefully chosen selection of case studies in a variety of locations and across diverse disciplines, the book demonstrates commonalities and differences in everyday water practices around Asia while challenging both romantic presumptions and Eurocentrism. 

Examples presented include class differences in water use in the megacity of Delhi, India; the impact of radiation on water practices in Fukushima, Japan; the role of the King in hydraulic practices in Thailand, and ritual irrigation in Bali, Indonesia.

chapter 1|18 pages

Contextualising the Anthropocene

The cultures, practices and politics of water knowledge in Asia

chapter 2|17 pages

‘If over a hundred Becquerels is no good, then what does fifty Becquerels mean?’

Governing fisheries and marine radiation in Japan after the Fukushima 
nuclear accident

chapter 4|18 pages

An epistemological re-visioning of hybridity

Water/lands 1

chapter 5|17 pages

Science as friend or foe?

Development projects undermining farmer managed irrigation systems in Asia’s high mountain valleys

chapter 6|21 pages

Competing epistemologies of community-based groundwater recharge in semi-arid north Rajasthan

Progress and lessons for 
groundwater-dependent areas

chapter 7|17 pages

Traditional knowledge and modernization of water

The story of a desert town Jaisalmer

chapter 8|17 pages

The hydro-ecological self and the community of water

Anupam Mishra 1 and the epistemological foundation of 
water traditions in Rajasthan

chapter 9|15 pages

Epistemological undercurrents

Delhi’s water crisis and the role of the urban water poor

chapter 11|19 pages

In the eye of the storm

Water in the cross-currents of consumerism, science and tradition 
in India

chapter 12|18 pages

Balinese wet rice agriculture in transition

Water knowledge between a sentient ecology and the pursuit of development

chapter 13|20 pages

Water flows uphill to power

Hydraulic development discourse in Thailand and power relations surrounding kingship and state making

chapter 14|16 pages

Waterscapes in transition

Past and present reshaping of sacred water places in Banaras 1

chapter 15|15 pages

Resettling a River Goddess

Aspects of local culture, development and national environmental movements in conflicting discourses on Dhārī Devī Temple and Srinagar Dam Project in Uttarakhand, India.