Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good+ with no dust jacket. 0520063139. Rubbing and toning overall, remains of a small sticker on the top right corner of the front and the heel, brief bumps to corners, and light foxing to the page edges. Interior pages clean and unmarked. Photos on request. International shipping billed at cost.; 8vo 8"-9" tall; 297 pages.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Minor rubbing. VG. 24x15cm, xiii, 297, (8)pp. "Every foreign traveler in Japan is delighted by the verdant forest-shrouded mountains that thrust skyward from one end of the island chain to the other. The Japanese themselves are conscious of the lush green of their homeland, which they sometimes refer to as 'the green archipelago'. Yet, based on its fragile geography and centuries of extremely dense human occupation, Japan today should be an impoverished, slum-ridden, peasant society subsisting on a barren, eroded moonscape characterized by bald mountains and debris-strewn lowlands. In fact, as Conrad Totman argues in this pathbreaking work based on prodigious research, this lush verdue is not a monument to nature's benevolence and Japanese aesthetic sensibilities, but the hard-earned result of generations of human toil that have converted the archipelago into one great forest preserve. Indeed, the author shows that until the late 1600s Japan was well on her way to ecological disaster due to exploitative forestry. During the Tokugawa period, however, an extraordinary change took place resulting in a system of 'regenerative forestry' that averted the devastation of Japan's forests."The Green Archipelago" is the only major Western-language work on this subject and a landmark not only in Japanese history, but in the history of the environment"-publisher's description.