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Turbulent Streams: An Environmental History of Japan's Rivers, 1600-1930 (Brill's Japanese Studies Library #68) (Hardcover)

Turbulent Streams: An Environmental History of Japan's Rivers, 1600-1930 (Brill's Japanese Studies Library #68) Cover Image
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Description


In Turbulent Streams: An Environmental History of Japan's Rivers, 1600-1930, Roderick I. Wilson describes how the rivers of Japan are both hydrologically and historically dynamic. Today, these waterways are slowed, channeled, diverted, and dammed by a myriad of levees, multiton concrete tetrapods, and massive multipurpose dams. In part, this intensive engineering arises from the waterways falling great elevations over short distances, flowing over unstable rock and soil, and receiving large quantities of precipitation during monsoons and typhoons. But this modern river regime is also the product of a history that narrowed both these waterways and people's diverse interactions with them in the name of flood control. Neither a story of technological progress nor environmental decline, this history introduces the concept of environmental relations as a category of historical analysis both to explore these fluvial interactions and reveal underappreciated dimensions of Japanese history.

About the Author


Roderick I. Wilson, Ph.D., Stanford University, is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he teaches and writes about topics in Japanese and environmental history.

Product Details
ISBN: 9789004433014
ISBN-10: 9004433015
Publisher: Brill
Publication Date: June 3rd, 2021
Pages: 308
Language: English
Series: Brill's Japanese Studies Library