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OverviewSouth and Central Asia is a region of extraordinary cultural and environmental diversity and home to nearly one-quarter of the earth's population. Among these diverse peoples are some whose ways of life are threatened by the accelerating assault of forces of change including environmental degradation, population growth, land loss, warfare, disease, and the penetration of global markets. This volume examines twelve groups whose way of life is endangered. Some are ""indigenous"" peoples, some are not; each group represents a unique answer to the question of how to survive and thrive on the planet earth, and illustrates both the threats and the responses of peoples caught up in the struggle to sustain cultural meaning, identity, and autonomy. Each chapter, written by an expert scholar for a general audience, offers a cultural overview, explores both threats to survival and the group's responses, and provokes discussion and further research with ""food for thought.""This powerful documentation of both tragedy and hope for the twenty-first-century survival of centuries-old cultures is a key reference for anyone interested in the region, in cultural survival, or in the interplay of diversification and homogenization. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Barbara Brower , Barbara Rose JohnstonPublisher: Left Coast Press Inc Imprint: Left Coast Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.566kg ISBN: 9781598741209ISBN 10: 1598741209 Pages: 275 Publication Date: 15 September 2007 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents* PrefaceBarbara Brower* IntroductionBarbara Brower and Barbara Rose Johnston* The BadakshaniStephen F. Cunha* The BhilJudy Whitehead* The DomAnna Schmid* The HazaraGrant Farr* The KashmirisAparna Rao and Michael Casimir* The LezghiJulian Birch* The Minhe ManghuerKevin Stuart* The Peripetetics of South AsiaAparna Rao* The RaikaPaul Robbins* The TharuArjun Guneratne* The TibetansChristiaan Klieger* The Wakhi and KirghizHermann Kreutzmann* The Wanniyelo AettoWiveca Stegeborn with Elizabeth von Till Warren* The YolmoNaomi BishopReviews'Disappearing peoples? is a groundbreaking book that describes how economic globalization, imperialism, war, and climate change in the twenty-first century threaten various Asian people's cultural heritage and how they are striving to maintain their traditions and identity under such extreme pressures. This edited volume uses twelve chapters on specific peoples - the Raika of India, Tibetans in China and India, Hazara in Afghanistan, Mangghuer in China - to illustrate the strong Introduction, which explains the import of dwindling diversity on humankind. The book provides a good overview that should whet the reader's appetite for more knowledge about Asian peoples, the causes and consequences of cultural homogenization.' Paula L.W. Sabloff, University of Pennsylvania 'The issues impacting local indigenous peoples are covered in the outstanding edited volume by Barbara Brower and Barbara Rose Johnston. This book provides the perfect text for leading students through several varying case studies of contemporary impacts to indigenous peoples. Not only is the book culturally encompassing, but it is also geographically and ecologically diverse. As such, it should also be considered essential reading for anyone working in, or interested about, South and Central Asia and its indigenous peoples.' Indigenous Peoples Issues & Resources Author InformationEdited by Brower, Barbara; Johnston, Barbara Rose Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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