Changing Pathways: Forest Degradation and the Batek of Pahang, Malaysia

Front Cover
Lexington Books, Jan 1, 2004 - Social Science - 227 pages
The Batek are hunter-gatherers who live in the lowland tropical forests of northeastern Peninsular Malaysia. Over the past few decades, as more and more of their forest home is degraded, they are developing an acute sensitivity to what this means, for them and for the broader world. In fact, they would like the world to know about their worries and their critiques of the causes of degradation. Changing Pathways was inspired by that need. Beyond a straightforward recounting of Batek environmental concerns, this book examines the cosmological basis for those concerns, the changing focus of the cosmology, the stories and histories through which the Batek express their place in the world, and suggests how environmental degradation might affect their knowledge, perception, and politics. Changing Pathways is an invaluable resource not only for environmental anthropologists and hunter-gatherer specialists but applied resource managers around the world.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Communicating Degradation
19
The World of the Forest
49
In the Beginning
77
A Sense of Place
95
Gathering in the Forest
123
To See to Hear to Walk and to Know
147
Changing Pathways
165
Tebu s Message Transcription and Translation
189
Route Descriptions
195
Notes on Wild Yam Species
197
Glossary
201
References
211
Index
221
About the Author
Copyright

Maps
179

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References to this book

Lines: A Brief History
Tim Ingold
No preview available - 2007

About the author (2004)

Lye Tuck-Po is Quillian Visiting International Professor at Randolph-Macon Woman's College.