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Editorial Reviews
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A brilliant study of how ancient the social and technical aspects of
water management systems in Bali, inextricably bound with nature and religion,
were undermined by the Green Revolution in the 1970s. Recommended.
Book Description
For the Balinese, the whole of nature is a perpetual resource: through
centuries of carefully directed labor by generations of farmers, the engineered
landscape of the island's rice terraces has taken shape. According to Stephen
Lansing, the need for effective cooperation in water management links thousands
of farmers together in hierarchies of productive relationships that span
entire watersheds. With unusual clarity and style, Lansing describes the
network of water temples that once managed the flow of irrigation water
in the name of the Goddess of the Crater Lake. Based on a system of power
relations so subtle as to be completely overlooked by colonial administrators,
the practical role of the temples was unnoticed until the advent of the
"Green Revolution" of the 1970s. Lansing shows how the water temples then
lost control of cropping patterns, a series of ecological crises developed,
and the bureaucratic model of irrigation control was shown to be hopelessly
over-simplified. Today the ancient system of water temples is threatened
by development plans that assume agriculture to be a purely technical phenomenon.
Using the techniques of ecological simulation modeling as well as cultural
and historical analysis, Lansing argues that the material and the symbolic
form a single complex--a historically evolving system of productive relationships
that is the true unit of analysis. The symbolic system of temple rituals
is not merely a reflection of utilitarian constraints but also a basic
ingredient in the organization of production. |