Foreword by Stevan Harrell
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliterations and Place-Names
Abbreviations and Foreign-Language Terms
Introduction
1. Vital Margins
2. Dreamworld, Shambala, Gannan
3. A Routine Discovery
4. Making National Parks in Yunnan
5. The Nature Conservancy in Shangrila
6. Transnational Matsutake Governance
7. Constructing and Deconstructing the Commons
8. Animate Landscapes
9. The Amoral Other
10. The Rise and Fall of the Green Tibetan
Afterword
References
Contributors
Index
Mapping Shangrila advances a view of landscapes as media of governance, representation, and resistance, examining how they are reshaping cultural economies, political ecologies of resource use, subjectivities, and inter-ethnic relations.
Emily T. Yeh is associate professor of geography at the University of Colorado Boulder and the author of Taming Tibet. Chris Coggins is professor of geography and Asian studies at Bard College at Simon's Rock and the author of The Tiger and the Pangolin: Nature, Culture, and Conservation in China. Contributors include Michael Hathaway, Travis Klingberg, Charlene E. Makley, Bob Moseley, Renie Mullen, Michelle Olsgard Stewart, Chris Vasantkumar, Li-hua Ying, John Aloysius Zinda, and Gesang Zeren.
"Notable for the consistent high quality of all of the included
articles, readers will be rewarded with interesting and accessible
studies regardless of where they open the book. . . . [G]reater
than its parts. . . . [I]t is the unveiling of a new way of
thinking about landscapes as dynamic sites of exchange. . . .
[R]eaders become witness to a landscape emerging from its pages
that is as multidimensional and dramatic as one might imagine the
‘real’ Shangrila to be."
*Environmental History*
"[T]he editors of this book have done a fine job assembling recent
studies into a comprehensive volume of ethnography and place-based
geographical analysis. . . [F]inely written and informative, in the
end this book is greater than the sum of its parts. . . . It
simultaneously is empirical and humanistic—and for that reason
illuminating. . . . [I]t successfully and pleasingly weds the
fluttering of geographical imagination to real issues on the
ground."
*Geographical Review*
"With the publication of [In the Land of the Eastern Queendom and
Mapping Shangrila], we see that “Sino-Tibetan Borderland Studies”
has in a sense come of age as a distinct area of inquiry. . . . The
Sino-Tibetan frontiers are thus of considerable interest in their
own right, while bringing an important range of broad issues facing
China into close focus as well."
*Pacific Affairs*
"[A] welcome move away from a predominant view of Shangrila as a
product of ‘Western’ desires and fantasies. . . [A]n important
addition to the growing body of studies on China’s borderlands
(material and conceptual), which are central to social, political,
and economic transformations in contemporary China."
*Journal of Asian Studies*
"Mapping Shangrila is an important—if somber—addition to the
scholarly literature on Tibet, Tibetan peoples, borderland and
frontier studies, geography, political ecology, and China area
studies. Yeh and Coggins have once again proven themselves adept at
producing scholarship that is solidly grounded in geographic theory
and perspectives, while appealing to and accessible to much broader
audiences. . . . Yeh and Coggins and their contributors should be
commended for this important contribution, which should serve as a
foundational reading for anyone seeking to understand how meanings
and mappings of ethnicity, nature, and culture are shaped and
reshaped in this fascinating and important region."
*AAG Review of Books*
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