Green Asia: Ecocultures, Sustainable Lifestyles, and Ethical Consumption

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Tania Lewis
Taylor & Francis, Sep 13, 2016 - Social Science - 206 pages

Economic development in Asia is associated with expanding urbanism, overconsumption, and a steep growth in living standards. At the same time, rapid urbanisation, changing class consciousness, and a new rural–urban divide in the region have led to fundamental shifts in the way ecological concerns are articulated politically and culturally. Moreover, these changes are often viewed through a Western moralistic lens, which at the same time applauds Asia’s economic growth as the welcome reviver of a floundering world economy and simultaneously condemns this growth as encouraging hyperconsumerism and a rupture with more natural ways of living. This book presents an analysis of a range of practices and activities from across Asia that demonstrate that people in Asia are alert to ecological concerns, that they are taking action to implement new styles of green living, and that Asia offers interesting alternatives to narrow Anglo-American models of sustainable living. Subjects explored include eco-tourism in the Philippines, green co-operatives in Korea, the importance of "tradition" within Asian discourses of sustainability, and much more.

 

Contents

1 Sustainability lifestyle and consumption in Asia
1
air conditioning and its alternatives in Asia
20
3 Green marketing and green consciousness in India
37
natural farming and Ecotea in Taiwan
51
ecoculture consumption and affect in Singapore
66
6 Domestic Eco tourism and the production of a wondrous nature in the Philippines
81
7 The greying of greenspeak? Environmental issues media discourses and consumer practices in China
99
grassroots air quality monitoring in urban China
114
a mobile game reflection in a post311 Tokyo Japan
129
sustainable living communal labor and social economy
142
toward an urbanrural hybrid city
155
the Ma Shi Po Community Farm in Hong Kong
169
Index
185
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About the author (2016)

Tania Lewis is an Associate Professor and Deputy Dean of Research and Innovation in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia

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