Feral edges: How permaculture is rewilding Japan's food culture on abandoned lands

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_2C0283F08CCC
Type
A part of a book
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Feral edges: How permaculture is rewilding Japan's food culture on abandoned lands
Title of the book
Food Baskets for Post-Growth Japan: revaluing informal and wild food practices as provisioning systems
Author(s)
Chakroun Leila
Publisher
ANU Press
Publication state
In Press
Editor
McGreevy Steven, Rupprecht Christoph, Tamura Norie
Language
english
Abstract
Permaculture lies at a double edge: it proposes a countercultural vision that is materialised at the hidden confines of Japan’s rural territory. From those cultural and territorial edges, it becomes possible to discreetly dissociate from the mainstream and experiment with novel visions and sustainability transformations at the individual- and farm-scale levels. It is not (yet) possible to quantify permaculture and, it is no less challenging to qualitatively unveil its importance, as it has instigated both drastic shifts and subtle changes, and because the people and places it inspires do not always publicly claim their affiliation to the permaculture movement. Still, permaculture has served some deep life reorientations and is quite dramatically re-designing some of Japan’s rural landscapes going feral in the context of depopulation and food commodification.
Create date
09/02/2022 13:44
Last modification date
17/07/2024 6:09
Usage data