1-20 of 300

Search Results for coffee

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2013) 72 (3): 728–729.
Published: 01 August 2013
...Stephanie Assmann Coffee Life in Japan . By Merry White . Berkeley : University of California Press , 2012 . 222 pp. $60.00 (cloth); $24.95 (paper). Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2013  2013 Japan is the land of tea but it is also the land of coffee...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1953) 12 (2): 206–208.
Published: 01 February 1953
... delicately entitled "Deploy in Reverse" or "The Long March (November 27th to December 9th, 1950 Duke University THEODORE ROPP Coffee, Tea and Cocoa. An Economic and Political Analysis. By V. D. WlCKIZER. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1951. xiii, 497. Appendix Tables, Index. $5.00. The Food Research...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2009) 68 (3): 1023–1024.
Published: 01 August 2009
...John D. Rogers From Coffee to Tea Cultivation in Ceylon, 1880–1900: An Economic and Social History . By Roland Wenzlhuemer . Leiden : Brill , 2008 . xxii , 336 pp. $148.00 (cloth). Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2009 2009 Over a remarkably brief period...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2023) 82 (1): 5–24.
Published: 01 February 2023
...Arjun Guneratne Abstract This article argues that the interests of coffee and tea planters in colonial Sri Lanka shaped the foundations of wildlife conservation policies, in which the state only played a secondary role. By destroying the forests of the highlands, they were the principal architects...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2013) 72 (1): 91–114.
Published: 01 February 2013
... was studied and discussed by elites and nonelites alike in noninstitutional spaces such as in rural homes and coffee shops, often at night, when institutions privileged by state and financial power had closed. By looking at these hidden space-times outside the realms of state guidance, we become privy...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1967) 27 (1): 5–20.
Published: 01 November 1967
... Hitchins F. H. , The Colonial Land & Emigration Commissioners ( Philadelphia , 1931 ). 14 Mills , op. cit. , p. 326 . 15 Riddell , op. cit. , p. 401 . 16 On the immigration of Indian labor to Ceylon during the coffee era (i.e. from about 1835...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (3): 697–698.
Published: 01 August 1988
... and pepper export trade, to the end of the nineteenth, when Minangkabau Islamic educators laid the groundwork for the nationalist and Modernist movements in Indonesia. The main story here, however, is how a set of dynamic tensions within Minangkabau society shaped both the adoption of coffee growing...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2021) 80 (4): 911–932.
Published: 01 November 2021
... Century .” Continuity and Change 24 ( 1 ): 55 – 78 . Breman , Jan . 2015 . Mobilizing Labour for the Global Coffee Market . Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press . Coolhaas , W. Ph. , eds. 1964 . Generale Missiven van Gouverneurs-Generaal en Raden aan Heren XVII der Verenigde...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1946) 5 (2): 120–132.
Published: 01 February 1946
... crops, such as rubber, cinchona, tea and coffee. Estates that specialized in irrigated crops, such as sugar, or in annual crops, as tobacco, depended largely on renting fields periodically from native landholders. The estates relied for manual labor on workers from nearby villages, most of whom were...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2021) 80 (3): 806–807.
Published: 01 August 2021
...,” but, it appears, no secret societies, clan/surname associations, or guilds. Nevertheless, the Chinese economic impact steadily grew as Cina Timor entrepreneurs became the oil in the machinery of trade and made possible a substantial increase in the production of coffee, which came to replace sandalwood...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1968) 27 (4): 916–917.
Published: 01 August 1968
... zones as well as the insular areas of New Guinea. Copra, cacao, coffee and tea are all income producing sources. Cash crops have not only altered the subsistence base, but have expanded needs to include copra driers, cacao fermentaries and coffee processers. Furthermore, with an increase in cash...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1968) 27 (4): 917–918.
Published: 01 August 1968
... Guinea. Copra, cacao, coffee and tea are all income producing sources. Cash crops have not only altered the subsistence base, but have expanded needs to include copra driers, cacao fermentaries and coffee processers. Furthermore, with an increase in cash cropping, local labor shortages may become...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1953) 12 (2): 206.
Published: 01 February 1953
... with the Marine operations rather delicately entitled "Deploy in Reverse" or "The Long March (November 27th to December 9th, 1950 Duke University THEODORE ROPP Coffee, Tea and Cocoa. An Economic and Political Analysis. By V. D. WlCKIZER. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1951. xiii, 497. Appendix Tables, Index...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2002) 61 (1): 333–335.
Published: 01 February 2002
... the compulsory growing of coffee in the area, generating great profits for the Dutch and increasing hardship for villagers in the highlands where most of the coffee was grown. Datulong was chief of the district of Sonder from 1824 to 1861. He got his start by recruiting more soldiers than any other chief...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1985) 44 (2): 417.
Published: 01 February 1985
... those of structuralist and neoclassical persuasions. The focus of this monograph is the central highlands of nineteenth-century Sri Lanka, which provided a congenial setup for the establishment by European capital of a sophisticated plantation system: first coffee, and later tea. In the process...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1978) 38 (1): 204.
Published: 01 November 1978
...) in the coffee plantation districts of the central highlands. To these, Michael Roberts has added another letter andfiveshort, provocative essays loosely tied to them. In the 1850s the coffee plantation industry was reviving from a depression, preparing for the boom of the 1860s and 1870s. Pieris's cousins (one...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2012) 71 (3): 832–833.
Published: 01 August 2012
... coffee table book. But after a closer engagement, the reader may realize that it requires more than just a cursory glance typically afforded to coffee table books. It provides extensive descriptions of design and contextualizes the architecture and gardens in their urban locales. The reader is taken from...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (3): 698–699.
Published: 01 August 1988
... strategies to secure an outlet for new industrial products and a supply of Sumatran goods: gold, pepper, cotton, coffee, tobacco, and sugar, in succession. Minangkabau heroes of "mountain freedom" (p. 247) reacted to each foreign attempt to regulate production and trade by shifting to a new crop. The author...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1997) 56 (3): 814–815.
Published: 01 August 1997
... with the Bengal army which was written as a series of letters to an anonymous friend. In 1807 he moved with his growing family to London where he first secured work in a bath house, before opening a coffee shopcum-restaurant known as the Hindostanee Coffee House. Bankruptcy brought an end to this venture...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1980) 39 (4): 693–710.
Published: 01 August 1980
... and Brazil, the depression in coffee prices, which induced planters to switch to rubber, a liberal land policy, and a permissive labor policy. 29 Drabble, Appendix 7, p. 220. 30 See Knorr Klaus , World Rubber and Its Regulation ( Stanford : Stanford Univ. Press , 1945 ); McFadyean...