ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2000: An original and thought-provoking analysis of modern initiatives in the tropical rain forest. While issues such as logging, eco-timber, eco-tourism have been widely analyzed from an outsider’s perspective, this book considers them from the local people’s viewpoint, in terms of a long history of the rainforest uses. The authors demonstrate that the relationship of indigenous people to the tropical forest is not essentially timeless, nor is it primarily spiritual or mystical. It is in fact firmly connected to modern realities, while still being rooted in historical beliefs and practices. Standing at the intersection of anthropology, historical geography and rainforest ecology, and also at the interface of the local and the global, this ethnographically grounded study dispels a number of commonly held assumptions. It reveals how processes of ’impact’ are actually two-way interactions, as local communities in Melanesia incorporate industries like logging into rapidly evolving post-colonial society and economy.

chapter 1|16 pages

Conceptualising the Rainforest

chapter 2|14 pages

Conceptualising Melanesian Agroforestry

chapter 3|46 pages

Life on the Lands of Marovo

chapter 4|36 pages

Above the Seashore: Land Use in Marovo

chapter 6|8 pages

The Great Transformations, 1880–1910

chapter 10|22 pages

After Logging: Reforestation – or What?

chapter 13|6 pages

Epilogue: Rainforest Narratives