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- catalog abstract "Japan is the world's leading fishing nation, not only in tonnages caught but also because of the staggering amount of fish the Japanese eat - an average of 65-70 kg each per year. Moreover, Japan boasts a maritime resource management system that differs from and in several respects seems more successful than those of Western Europe and North America. It is impossible to understand the present situation in Japan's fishing industry without having a knowledge of its past. What is more, Japan's fishing villages played a significant role in Japan's economic development. In particular, during the Tokugawa period (1600-1868), they acted as key commercial links between the castle towns and dispersed farming communities. The aims of this book, therefore, are twofold: first, to place maritime resource management within the larger context of social and material reproduction and, second, to analyse the fishing villages in the context of Japan's economic history.".
- catalog contributor b7828481.
- catalog coverage "Fukuoka-ken (Japan) History.".
- catalog coverage "Japan History Tokugawa period, 1600-1868.".
- catalog created "c1995.".
- catalog date "1995".
- catalog date "c1995.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1995.".
- catalog description "1. Introduction -- Pt. I. The Setting. 2. The Feudal Setting. 3. The World View. 4. Population and Household. 5. Occupational Diversity -- Pt. II. The Fisheries. 6. Fishing Technologies. 7. Technological Distribution in Time and Space. 8. Ownership and Composition of Fishing Units. 9. Sea Tenure. 10. The World of the Female Divers. 11. Fukuoka and Whaling. 12. Marketing of Marine Products -- Pt. III. Reproduction. 13. Corvee Labour. 14. Appropriating the Surplus. 15. Coping with Disasters. 16. Generating Industrial Capital. 17. Changing Fortunes -- 18. Conclusion -- App. 1 Main Marine Species Caught in Chikuzen Province -- App. 2 Marine Catches in Chikuzen and Fukuoka, 1897-1910 -- App. 3 Historical Sources.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [325]-338) and indexes.".
- catalog description "Japan is the world's leading fishing nation, not only in tonnages caught but also because of the staggering amount of fish the Japanese eat - an average of 65-70 kg each per year. Moreover, Japan boasts a maritime resource management system that differs from and in several respects seems more successful than those of Western Europe and North America. It is impossible to understand the present situation in Japan's fishing industry without having a knowledge of its past. What is more, Japan's fishing villages played a significant role in Japan's economic development. In particular, during the Tokugawa period (1600-1868), they acted as key commercial links between the castle towns and dispersed farming communities. The aims of this book, therefore, are twofold: first, to place maritime resource management within the larger context of social and material reproduction and, second, to analyse the fishing villages in the context of Japan's economic history.".
- catalog extent "355 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0824816323".
- catalog isPartOf "Nordic Institute of Asian Studies monograph series ; no. 69.".
- catalog isPartOf "Nordic Institute of Asian Studies recent monographs ; no. 69".
- catalog issued "1995".
- catalog issued "c1995.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Honolulu : University of Hawaii Press,".
- catalog spatial "Fukuoka-ken (Japan) History.".
- catalog spatial "Japan Fukuoka-ken".
- catalog spatial "Japan History Tokugawa period, 1600-1868.".
- catalog subject "338.3/727/0952220903 20".
- catalog subject "DS894.99.F837 K35 1995".
- catalog subject "Fishing villages Japan Fukuoka-ken History.".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. Introduction -- Pt. I. The Setting. 2. The Feudal Setting. 3. The World View. 4. Population and Household. 5. Occupational Diversity -- Pt. II. The Fisheries. 6. Fishing Technologies. 7. Technological Distribution in Time and Space. 8. Ownership and Composition of Fishing Units. 9. Sea Tenure. 10. The World of the Female Divers. 11. Fukuoka and Whaling. 12. Marketing of Marine Products -- Pt. III. Reproduction. 13. Corvee Labour. 14. Appropriating the Surplus. 15. Coping with Disasters. 16. Generating Industrial Capital. 17. Changing Fortunes -- 18. Conclusion -- App. 1 Main Marine Species Caught in Chikuzen Province -- App. 2 Marine Catches in Chikuzen and Fukuoka, 1897-1910 -- App. 3 Historical Sources.".
- catalog title "Fishing villages in Tokugawa, Japan / Arne Kalland.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".