Japanese Gardens and Landscapes, 1650-1950

Japanese Gardens and Landscapes, 1650-1950
Title Japanese Gardens and Landscapes, 1650-1950 PDF eBook
Author Wybe Kuitert
Publisher Penn Studies in Landscape Arch
Pages 372
Release 2016
Genre Architecture
ISBN 9780812244748

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In Japanese Landscapes and Gardens, 1650-1950 Wybe Kuitert presents a richly illustrated survey of the gardens and the people who commissioned, created, and used them and chronicles the modernization of traditional aesthetics in the context of economic, political, and environmental transformation.

Themes, Scenes, and Taste in the History of Japanese Garden Art

Themes, Scenes, and Taste in the History of Japanese Garden Art
Title Themes, Scenes, and Taste in the History of Japanese Garden Art PDF eBook
Author Wybe Kuitert
Publisher John Benjamins Publishing Company
Pages 372
Release 1988
Genre Art
ISBN

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The manual Sakuteiki does not cover this subject.

Elysium Britannicum, Or the Royal Gardens

Elysium Britannicum, Or the Royal Gardens
Title Elysium Britannicum, Or the Royal Gardens PDF eBook
Author John Evelyn
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages 510
Release 2001
Genre Architecture
ISBN 9780812235364

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Interlacing in his work practical, literary, and philosophical approaches to landscape architecture, Evelyn created the first large-scale encyclopedic work on the science and art of gardening."--BOOK JACKET.

Spaces in Translation

Spaces in Translation
Title Spaces in Translation PDF eBook
Author Christian Tagsold
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages 256
Release 2017-09-26
Genre Architecture
ISBN 0812246748

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In Spaces in Translation, Christian Tagsold explores Japanese gardens in the West and ponders their history, the reasons for their popularity, and their connections to geopolitical events. He concludes that a process of cultural translation between Japanese and Western experts created an idea of the Orient and its distinction from the West.

The American Woodland Garden

The American Woodland Garden
Title The American Woodland Garden PDF eBook
Author
Publisher Timber Press (OR)
Pages 377
Release 2002
Genre Gardening
ISBN 9780881925456

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This award-winning book promotes a garden aesthetic based on the strengths and opportunities of the woodland, including play of light, sound, scent, seasonal drama, and the architectural interest of woody plants. Accompanied by an alphabetical list of suitable plants.

Extinction and the Human

Extinction and the Human
Title Extinction and the Human PDF eBook
Author Timothy Sweet
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages 201
Release 2021-10-08
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0812298055

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The Americas have been the site of two distinct waves of human migration, each associated with human-caused extinctions. The first occurred during the late Pleistocene era, some ten to thirty thousand years ago; the other began during the time of European settler-colonization and continues to this day. In Extinction and the Human Timothy Sweet ponders the realities of animal extinction and endangerment and the often divergent Native American and Euro-American narratives that surround them. He focuses especially on the force of human impact on megafauna—mammoths, whales, and the North American bison—beginning with the moments that these species' extinction or endangerment began to generate significant print archives: transcriptions of traditional Indigenous oral narratives, historical and scientific accounts, and literary narratives by Indigenous American and Euro-American authors. "If the Sixth Extinction is a hyperobject, an event so massively distributed in space and time that it cannot be experienced directly," he writes, "these cases of particular megafauna have nevertheless consistently commanded our focus and attention. They form a starting point for a coherent, approachable history." Reflecting on questions of agency, responsibility, and moral assessment, Sweet engages with the consequences of thinking of humans as fundamentally separate from the rest of the natural world. He investigates stories of a lost race of giants at the time of the first encounters between Europeans and Indigenous Americans; culturally distinct ways of understanding the extinction of the mammoths; the impact of the Euro-American whaling industry and the controversial revitalization of Native American whaling traditions; and the bison's near-extermination at the hands of white market hunters and today's Euro-American and Native American efforts on behalf of the animal's preservation. He reflects on humans' relations with animals through models of divine preservation, competitive extermination, evolutionary determination, biophilia, and treaties with animals. Ultimately, he argues, it is the critical assessment of ideas of human exceptionalism that provides a necessary counterpoint both to apologies for human mastery over nature and deep ecology's attempts to erase the human.

The Buddha's Footprint

The Buddha's Footprint
Title The Buddha's Footprint PDF eBook
Author Johan Elverskog
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages 192
Release 2020-02-21
Genre History
ISBN 0812251830

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A corrective to the contemporary idea that Buddhism has always been an environmentally friendly religion In the current popular imagination, Buddhism is often understood to be a religion intrinsically concerned with the environment. The Dharma, the name given to Buddhist teachings by Buddhists, states that all things are interconnected. Therefore, Buddhists are perceived as extending compassion beyond people and animals to include plants and the earth itself out of a concern for the total living environment. In The Buddha's Footprint, Johan Elverskog contends that only by jettisoning this contemporary image of Buddhism as a purely ascetic and apolitical tradition of contemplation can we see the true nature of the Dharma. According to Elverskog, Buddhism is, in fact, an expansive religious and political system premised on generating wealth through the exploitation of natural resources. Elverskog surveys the expansion of Buddhism across Asia in the period between 500 BCE and 1500 CE, when Buddhist institutions were built from Iran and Azerbaijan in the west, to Kazakhstan and Siberia in the north, Japan in the east, and Sri Lanka and Indonesia in the south. He examines the prosperity theology at the heart of the Dharma that declared riches to be a sign of good karma and the means by which spritiual status could be elevated through donations bequeathed to Buddhist institutions. He demonstrates how this scriptural tradition propelled Buddhists to seek wealth and power across Asia and to exploit both the people and the environment. Elverskog shows the ways in which Buddhist expansion not only entailed the displacement of local gods and myths with those of the Dharma—as was the case with Christianity and Islam—but also involved fundamentally transforming earlier social and political structures and networks of economic exchange. The Buddha's Footprint argues that the institutionalization of the Dharma was intimately connected to agricultural expansion, resource extraction, deforestation, urbanization, and the monumentalization of Buddhism itself.