LDR   02820ngm^^22003613a^4500
001        LOAA006037_00001
005        20170613091418.0
006        m^^^^^o^^i^^^^^^^^
007        cr^^na---ma^mp
008        170613n^^^^^^^^xx^nnn^^^^^^^^o^^^^ueng^d
040        |a UkLSOA |c UkLSOA
245 00 |a Salt water margin |h [electronic resource] |b red rice, reclamations, and restaurateurs along the South China Coast (an ethnographic puzzle).
260        |a [S.l.] : |b SOAS University of London, |c 2012.
500        |a Biographical Information: James L. Watson, in 2012, was the Fairbank Professor of Chinese Society and Professor of Anthropology, Emeritus, Harvard University
500        |a Recorded on 22 March 2012 at an event sponsored by the SOAS Food Studies Centre
500        |a VIAF (name authority) : Watson, James L. : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/68959996
520 3    |a How did residents of an impoverished, hard-scrabble village in Hong Kong’s New Territories succeed in dominating the Chinese restaurant trade in the U.K., Belgium, Holland, and Canada? For an answer we must look to the history and ecology of the Pearl River Delta, one of China’s most productive agricultural zones. -- In the chaotic aftermath of the Manchu conquests, 1644-1672, pioneers from central China settled on the fringe of the delta, near salt-water marshes that no one else wanted. Over the next two centuries they and their descendants – founding members of the Man lineage – reclaimed over a thousand acres of mudflats and built brackish-water enclosures that grew a special variety of red rice. The entire crop – only one per year – was sold to distilleries that produced medicinal wines and livestock feed. -- Unlike neighboring lineages that thrived on fresh-water, double-crop white rice, the Man always lived on the edge. They had no choice but to engage in entrepreneurial ventures, both legal and illegal. This lecture traces the social history of the Man from the rice fields in the early 20th century, to the European restaurant trade in the 1950s and 1960s, to remarkable affluence and global enterprises in the 21st century. The heart of the story is red rice and the long-term consequences of life in a marginal ecosystem.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |b London : |c SOAS University of London, |d 2017. |f (SOAS Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
535 1    |a SOAS University of London.
650        |a 亚洲 -- 中国.
650        |a 亞洲 -- 中國.
650        |a Europe -- United Kingdom -- England -- Greater London -- London -- Bloomsbury.
720 1    |a Watson, James L..
752        |a China.
830    0 |a SOAS Digital Collections.
830    0 |a SOAS Repositories.
830    0 |a East Asia Collection.
830    0 |a China Collection.
830    0 |a SOAS Media.
852        |a GBR |b SDC |c SOAS Repositories
856 40 |u https://digital.soas.ac.uk/LOAA006037/00001 |y Electronic Resource
992 04 |a http://digital.soas.ac.uk/content/LO/AA/00/60/37/00001/LOAA006037thm.jpg
997        |a SOAS Repositories


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