ABSTRACT

Drawing on anthropological and historical data, this book examines human-wildlife relations in China, Tibet, Japan, Bhutan, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, India, Thailand and Vietnam. The volume initially focuses on the various ways in which wild animals are exploited as a resource, for food, medicine and crop-picking labour, before examining animals termed as pests or predators that are deemed to be harmful and dangerous.

Bringing together anthropologists and historians, this book analyses the range, variability and historical mutability of human sensibilities towards animals in Asia and will be of interest to Asianists and anthropologists alike.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|116 pages

Wildlife as Resource

chapter 2|20 pages

2 The Chase And The Dharma

The legal protection of wild animals in premodern Tibet

chapter 6|17 pages

6 Coconut-Picking Macaques In Southern Thailand

Economic, cultural and ecological aspects

part II|126 pages

Wildlife Pests and Predators

chapter 8|18 pages

8 Farming The Forest Edge

Perceptions of wildlife among the Kerinci of Sumatra

chapter 9|20 pages

9 Pigs Across Ethnic Boundaries

Examples from Indonesia and the Philippines

chapter 11|26 pages

11 The Raj And The Natural World

The war against ‘dangerous beasts' in Colonial India

chapter 12|22 pages

12 Wolf Reintroduction In Japan?