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Featured researches published by Brett L. Walker.


Archive | 2015

The Birth of the Yamato State, 14,500 bce – 710 ce

Brett L. Walker

Japan’s environment proved much more than simply a sculptor of Japanese civilization, where wind and rain painstakingly chiselled, over the centuries, the intricate contours of Japanese life. Rather, the environment was a product of Japanese civilization. Early inhabitants of the Japanese Islands, from the Yayoi archaeological phase (300 bce – 300 ce ) onward, carved, sliced, burned, and hoed their subsistence needs and cultural sensibilities into the alluvial plains, forests, mountainous spine, and bays of the archipelago, transforming it, like some colossal bonsai tree, into a material manifestation of their needs and desires. This is the most profound disjuncture between the Jomon archaeological phase (14,500 bce – 300 bce ) and the Yayoi: the introduction of East Asian culture and its transformative effect on the archipelago. This chapter explores the emergence of the earliest Japanese state, and how state development was intimately connected to environmental transformation. Early Foragers and Settlers The Pleistocene Epoch, about 2.6 million to 11,700 years before present ( ybp ), witnessed the first wave of early hominid, non-human animal, and incidental plant migrations across Eurasia and onto the Japanese archipelago. Japan was not an archipelago at the time, however. Rather, it was connected to the continent at both the southern and northern sections by coastal lowlands that formed a terrestrial crescent with the Sea of Japan serving as what must have been an impressive inland sea. Whether modern hominids came from Africa and displaced earlier hominids, or the earlier arrivals evolved into modern hominids, is still debated, but by 100,000 ybp many palaeolithic foragers roamed Eurasia, and some of them wandered onto this terrestrial crescent in pursuit of game and other foraging opportunities. The 1931 discovery of a left pelvic bone first suggested palaeolithic habitation of the terrestrial crescent, but air raids destroyed the bone during the Pacific War (1937–45) and the bone’s discoverer was only vindicated with the later unearthing of other palaeolithic remains throughout Japan.


Environmental History | 2015

Forum: Technology, Ecology, and Human Health Since 1850

Chris Otter; Nicholas Breyfogle; John L. Brooke; Mari K. Webel; Matthew Klingle; Andrew Price-Smith; Brett L. Walker; Linda Nash

The Anthropocene has seen tremendous transformations in human and nonhuman environments across the globe. The five essays in this Forum, plus a comment, explore the diverse ways in which these environments have shaped new ecologies for the spread of old diseases or the emergence and dissemination of new ones. They focus on sleeping sickness, type 2 diabetes, Escherichia coli O157:H7, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and malignant mesothelioma and reveal several distinct phenomena associated with disease in the Anthropocene: technological networks, ecological disruption, new evolutionary niches, novel materials, mismatch diseases, and knowledge production. Although not exhaustive, this Forum provides a broad basis for comprehending what is historically specific and significant about disease in the Anthropocene.


Archive | 2010

Toxic archipelago: a history of industrial disease in Japan

Brett L. Walker


The Journal of Asian Studies | 2001

The conquest of Ainu lands : ecology and culture in Japanese expansion, 1590-1800

Brett L. Walker


Archive | 2005

The Lost Wolves of Japan

Brett L. Walker; William Cronon


Environmental History | 2003

The Conquest of Ainu Lands: Ecology and Culture in Japanese Expansion

Taiichi Ito; Brett L. Walker


History and Theory | 2013

ANIMALS AND THE INTIMACY OF HISTORY

Brett L. Walker


Archive | 2013

Japan at Nature's Edge: The Environmental Context of a Global Power

Ian Jared Miller; Julia Adeney Thomas; Brett L. Walker


The Journal of Asian Studies | 2001

Commercial growth and environmental change in early modern Japan : Hachinohe's wild boar famine of 1749

Brett L. Walker


Journal of Historical Geography | 2007

Mamiya Rinzō and the Japanese exploration of Sakhalin Island: cartography and empire

Brett L. Walker

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Linda Nash

University of Washington

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William Cronon

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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