Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T07:49:06.306Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 2023

Fynn Holm
Affiliation:
Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Germany

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
The Gods of the Sea
Whales and Coastal Communities in Northeast Japan, c.1600-2019
, pp. 192 - 212
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

References

Abashiri shishi hensan iinkai. Abashiri shishi: Gekan. Abashiri: Abashiri-shi Yakusho, 1971.Google Scholar
Akamine, Jun. Kujira wo ikiru: Geijin no kojinshi, geishoku no dōjidaishi. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 2017.Google Scholar
Akashi, Kiichi. Honpō no noruē-shiki hogeishi. Osaka: Tōyō Hogei, 1910.Google Scholar
Akimichi, Tomoya. Kujira wa dare no mono ka. Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō, 2009.Google Scholar
Akimichi, Tomoya, Asquith, Pamela J., Befu, Harumi et al. Small-Type Coastal Whaling in Japan: Report of an International Workshop. Edited by Freeman, Milton M. R.. Alberta: University of Alberta, 1988.Google Scholar
Aldrich, Daniel P. Site Fights: Divisive Facilities and Civil Society in Japan and the West. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Alroy, John. ‘A Multispecies Overkill Simulation of the End-Pleistocene Megafaunal Mass Extinction’. Science 292, no. 5523 (8 June 2001): 1893–6.Google Scholar
Alvestad, Sigrid. ‘Opposition to Whaling in Scotland and Ireland before WWI’. In Whaling and History II: New Perspectives, edited by Ringstad, Jan Erik, 137–46. Sandefjord: Sandefjordmuseene, 2006.Google Scholar
Ambros, Barbara. Bones of Contention: Animals and Religion in Contemporary Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Amino, Yoshihiko. Rethinking Japanese History. Translated by Alan S. Christy. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 2012.Google Scholar
Andrews, Roy Chapman. Journals 1908–1912: Whale Notes, Measurements Japan, 1910. Vol. 3. New York: American Museum of Natural History, 1912. http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/handle/2246/6893.Google Scholar
Andrews, Roy Chapman Whale Hunting with Gun and Camera. New York: D. Appletion, 1916.Google Scholar
Anonymous. ‘Hiryō ninpuchō’. Ayukawa, 1911. Private collection of Katō Koji.Google Scholar
Arai, Eiji. Kinsei no gyoson. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1970.Google Scholar
Arakawa, H. ‘Meteorological Conditions of the Great Famines in the Last Half of the Tokugawa Period, Japan’. Papers in Meteorology and Geophysics 6, no. 2 (1955): 101–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arch, Jakobina. Bringing Whales Ashore: Oceans and the Environment of Early Modern Japan. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2018.Google Scholar
Arch, Jakobina ‘Bringing Whales Ashore: Oceans and the Environment of Early Modern Japan, 1600–1900’. PhD Thesis, Harvard University, 2014.Google Scholar
Arch, JakobinaNineteenth-Century Japanese Whaling and Early Territorial Expansion in the Pacific’. In New Histories of Pacific Whaling, edited by Jones, Ryan Tucker and Wanhalla, Angela, 5763. RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society. Munich: Rachel Carson Center, 2019.Google Scholar
Arch, JakobinaWhale Oil Pesticide: Natural History, Animal Resources, and Agriculture in Early Modern Japan’. In New Perspectives on the History of Life Sciences and Agriculture, edited by Kingsland, Sharon and Phillips, Denise, 93111. Cham: Springer International, 2015.Google Scholar
Assmann, Jan, and Czaplicka, John. ‘Collective Memory and Cultural Identity’. New German Critique, no. 65 (1995): 125–33.Google Scholar
Avenell, Simon. Transnational Japan in the Global Environmental Movement. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Ayabe, Kazuo. ‘Noeruē-shiki hogei ni taisuru gojin no kibō’. Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō, no. 335 (April 1910): 34.Google Scholar
Baccini, Peter, and Brunner, Paul H.. Metabolism of the Anthroposphere: Analysis, Evaluation, Design. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Berger-Eforo, Judith. ‘Sanctuary for the Whales: Will This Be the Demise of the International Whaling Commission or a Viable Strategy for the Twenty-First Century’. Pace International Law Review 8, no. 2 (April 1996): 439–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berkes, Fikret. Sacred Ecology. 4th ed. New York: Routledge, 2018.Google Scholar
Biggs, Reinette, Carpenter, Stephen R., and Brock, William A.. ‘Turning Back from the Brink: Detecting an Impending Regime Shift in Time to Avert It’. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106, no. 3 (January 2009): 826–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birmingham, Lucy, and McNeill, David. Strong in the Rain Surviving Japan’s Earthquake, Tsunami, and Fukushima Nuclear Disaster. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.Google Scholar
Blok, Anders. ‘Contesting Global Norms: Politics of Identity in Japanese Pro-Whaling Countermobilization’. Global Environmental Politics 8, no. 2 (2008): 3966.Google Scholar
Bowen, Roger W. Rebellion and Democracy in Meiji Japan: A Study of Commoners in the Popular Rights Movement. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Brabyn, Mark W. An Analysis of the New Zealand Whale Stranding Record. Vol. 29. Science & Research Series 0113–3713. Wellington: Head Office, Department of Conservation, 1991.Google Scholar
Bradshaw, Corey J. A., Evans, Karen, and Hindell, Mark A.. ‘Mass Cetacean Strandings: A Plea for Empiricism’. Conservation Biology 20, no. 2 (March 2006): 584–6.Google Scholar
Bruun, Ole, and Kalland, Arne. ‘Images of Nature: An Introduction to the Study of Man-Environment Relations in Asia’. In Asian Perception of Nature: A Critical Approach, edited by Bruun, Ole and Kalland, Arne, 124. London: Routledge Curzon, 1995.Google Scholar
Burnett, D. Graham. The Sounding of the Whale: Science and Cetaceans in the Twentieth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Calambokidis, John, Barlow, Jay, Ford, John K. B., Chandler, Todd E., and Douglas, Annie B.. ‘Insights into the Population Structure of Blue Whales in the Eastern North Pacific from Recent Sightings and Photographic Identification’. Marine Mammal Science 25, no. 4 (October 2009): 816–32.Google Scholar
Carwardine, Mark. Handbook of Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Wildlife, 2019.Google Scholar
Cawthorn, Martin, W. Meat Consumption from Stranded Whales and Marine Mammals in New Zealand: Public Health and Other Issues. Wellington: Department of Conservation, 1997.Google Scholar
Cetinkaya, Gulay. ‘Challenges for the Maintenance of Traditional Knowledge in the Satoyama and Satoumi Ecosystems, Noto Peninsula, Japan’. Human Ecology Review 16, no. 1 (2009): 2740.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. ‘Anthropocene Time’. History and Theory 57, no. 1 (March 2018): 532.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, DipeshThe Climate of History: Four Theses’. Critical Inquiry 35, no. 2 (Winter 2009): 197222.Google Scholar
Chiba, Akio. Sendairyō no ōkimoiri: Iwai-gun Tōyama no shiryō wo chūshin ni. Tōban: Tōban Purintosha, 1985.Google Scholar
Clapham, Phillip J.Managing Leviathan: Conservation Challenges for the Great Whales in a Post-Whaling World’. Oceanography 29, no. 3 (2016): 214–25.Google Scholar
Corkeron, Peter J.Marine Mammals’ Influence on Ecosystem Processes Affecting Fisheries in the Barents Sea is Trivial’. Biology Letters 5, no. 2 (January 2009): 204–6.Google Scholar
Cottee-Jones, Henry Eden W., and Whittaker, Robert J.. ‘The Keystone Species Concept: A Critical Appraisal’. Frontiers of Biogeography 4, no. 3 (28 September 2012): 117–27.Google Scholar
Cronon, William. ‘The Uses of Environmental History’. Environmental History Review 17, no. 3 (Autumn 1993): 122.Google Scholar
Crowley, Thomas J., Zielinski, G., Vinther, B. et al. ‘Volcanism and the Little Ice Age’. PAGES News 16, no. 2 (April 2008): 22–3.Google Scholar
Crutzen, Paul J. ‘The “Anthropocene”’. In Earth System Science in the Anthropocene, edited by Ehlers, Eckart and Krafft, Thomas, 1318. Berlin: Springer, 2006.Google Scholar
Cushman, Gregory T. Guano and the Opening of the Pacific World: A Global Ecological History. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō. ‘Chōsha shūryō’. September 1893.Google Scholar
Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō ‘Honkai setsuritsu no tenmatsu’. November 1882.Google Scholar
Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō ‘Kaibō no kyūmu hogei ni ari’. June 1887.Google Scholar
Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō ‘Zenkoku hogei gyōsha daikai’. October 1907.Google Scholar
De Ganon, Pieter S. ‘The Animal Economy’. PhD Dissertation, Princeton University, 2011.Google Scholar
Demuth, Bathsheba. Floating Coast: An Environmental History of the Bering Strait. 1st ed. New York: W. W. Norton, 2019.Google Scholar
Dolin, Eric Jay. Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America. New York: W. W. Norton, 2007.Google Scholar
Drengson, Alan. ‘The Deep Ecology Movement’. The Trumpeter 12, no. 3 (July 1995).Google Scholar
Drixler, Fabian. Mabiki: Infanticide and Population Growth in Eastern Japan, 1660–1950. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Dusinberre, Martin. Hard Times in the Hometown: A History of Community Survival in Modern Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Ehlers, Maren. ‘Benevolence, Charity, and Duty: Urban Relief and Domain Society during the Tenmei Famine’. Monumenta Nipponica 69, no. 1 (2014): 55101.Google Scholar
Eisenstadt, Shmuel, N. ‘The Japanese Attitude to Nature: A Framework of Basic Ontological Conceptions’. In Asian Perception of Nature: A Critical Approach, edited by Bruun, Ole and Kalland, Arne, 189214. London: Routledge Curzon, 1995.Google Scholar
Ellis, Richard. Men and Whales. New York: Knopf, 1991.Google Scholar
Ericson, Kjell David. ‘Nature’s Helper: Mikimoto Kōkichi and the Place of Cultivation in the Twentieth Century’s Pearl Empires’. PhD Dissertation, Princeton University, 2015.Google Scholar
Estes, James A., Heithaus, Michael, McCauley, Douglas J., Rasher, Douglas B., and Worm, Boris. ‘Megafaunal Impacts on Structure and Function of Ocean Ecosystems’. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 41, no. 1 (2016): 83116.Google Scholar
Farris, William Wayne. Japan to 1600: A Social and Economic History. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Ferguson, Dean T.Nightsoil and the “Great Divergence”: Human Waste, the Urban Economy, and Economic Productivity, 1500–1900’. Journal of Global History 9, no. 3 (November 2014): 379402.Google Scholar
Finley, Carmel. All the Fish in the Sea: Maximum Sustainable Yield and the Failure of Fisheries Management. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Francks, Penelope. Japan and the Great Divergence: A Short Guide. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.Google Scholar
Freeman, Donald B. The Pacific. Seas in History. London: Routledge, 2010.Google Scholar
Fujikawa, Sankei. Hogei Zushiki. Kobe: Inoue Shinkōdō, 1889.Google Scholar
Fukai, Jinza, and Ueno, Yoshio. ‘Tenpō Kikinki, Ecchū Himichō No Gyokyō to Gyomin: Kankyōshi No Shiten Kara No Kōsatsu’. Shakai Keizaishigaku 63, no. 5 (1998): 579–98.Google Scholar
Furutae, Tsuzō. Kinsei gyohi ryūtsū no chikiteki tenkai. Tokyo: Kokon Shoin, 1996.Google Scholar
Garrison, Tom. Essentials of Oceanography. 5th ed. Belemont: Brooks/Cole Cengage Learning, 2009.Google Scholar
George, Timothy S. Minamata: Pollution and the Struggle for Democracy in Postwar Japan. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2001.Google Scholar
Gerber, Leah R., Morissette, Lyne, Kaschner, Kristin, and Pauly, Daniel. ‘Should Whales Be Culled to Increase Fishery Yield?’. Science 323, no. 5916 (13 February 2009): 880–1.Google Scholar
Gillespie, Alexander. ‘The Bi-cultural Relationship with Whales: Between Progress, Success and Conflict’. Te Matahauariki Research Institute, 1999, 138. Research Paper.Google Scholar
Gillis, John. ‘Not Continents in Miniature: Islands as Ecotones’. Island Studies Journal 9, no. 1 (2014): 155–66.Google Scholar
Godefroy, Noémi. ‘Rethinking Ezo-Chi, the Ainu, and Tokugawa Japan in a Global Perspective’. In The Tokugawa World, edited by Leupp, Gary P. and Tao, De-min, 370404. London: Routledge, 2021.Google Scholar
Göhlert, Christian. Die Verehrung von Wasserleichen und ihre Stellung im japanischen Volksglauben. München: Iudicium, 2010.Google Scholar
Gramlich-Oka, Bettina. Thinking Like a Man: Tadano Makuzu (1763–1825). Leiden: Brill, 2006.Google Scholar
Griffin, Carl J., and Robertson, Iain J. M.. ‘Elvers and Salmon: Moral Ecologies and Conflict on the Nineteenth-Century Severn’. In The New Coastal History, edited by Worthington, David, 99116. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.Google Scholar
Gruber, Carmen. ‘Escaping Malthus: A Comparative Look at Japan and the “Great Divergence”’. Journal of Global History 9, no. 3 (November 2014): 403–24.Google Scholar
Guichard-Anguis, Sylvie. ‘The Parish of a Famous Shrine: The Influence of Rites and Ceremonials on Urban Life: The Sanctuary of Ebisu in Nishinomiya’. In Ceremony and Ritual in Japan: Religious Practices in an Industrialized Society, edited by van Bremen, Jan and Martinez, Dolores P., 6779. London: Routledge, 1995.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez, Dimitri, Sifeddine, Abdelfettah, Field, David et al. ‘Rapid Reorganization in Ocean Biogeochemistry off Peru Towards the End of the Little Ice Age’. Biogeosciences 6 (2009): 835–48.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shakai keizaishi kenkyūkai. Gaisetsu Hachinohe no rekishi. Vol. 1. Hachinohe: Hoppō Harua Kisha, 1962.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shiritsu toshokan. Hachinohe Nanbu shikō. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 1999.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai. Hachinohe shishi: Shiryōhen Kinsei. Vols. 1–10. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 1969.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai Hachinohe shishi: Shiryōhen Kinsei. Vol. 2. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 1970.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai Hachinohe shishi: Shiryōhen Kinsei. Vol. 5. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 1977.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai Hachinohe shishi: Shiryōhen Kinsei. Vol. 8. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 1980.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai Shinpen Hachinohe shishi: Kingendai Shiryōhen 2. Vol. 2. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 2008.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai Shinpen Hachinohe shishi: Kinsei Shiryōhen. Vol. 2. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 2013.Google Scholar
Hachinohe shishi hensan iinkai Shinpen Hachinohe shishi: Tsūshihen Kingendai. Vol. 3. Hachinohe: Hachinohe-shi, 2014.Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna. ‘Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin’. Environmental Humanities 6, no. 1 (1 May 2015): 159–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardin, Garrett. ‘The Tragedy of the Commons’. Science 162, no. 3859 (13 December 1968): 1243–8.Google Scholar
Hayami, Akira. The Historical Demography of Pre-modern Japan. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Headrick, Daniel. ‘Global Warming, the Ruddiman Thesis, and the Little Ice Age’. Journal of World History 26, no. 1 (January 2016): 157–60.Google Scholar
Hellyer, Robert I. Defining Engagement: Japan and Global Contexts, 1640–1868. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2009.Google Scholar
Higuchi, Toshihiro. ‘Japan as an Organic Empire: Commercial Fertilizers, Nitrogen Supply, and Japan’s Core-Peripheral Relationship’. In Environment and Society in the Japanese Islands: From Prehistory to the Present, edited by Batten, Bruce L. and Brown, Philip C., 139–57. Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Hirata, Keiko. ‘Beached Whales: Examining Japan’s Rejection of an International Norm’. Social Science Japan Journal 7, no. 2 (October 2004): 177–97.Google Scholar
Hjort, Johan. Fiskeri og hvalfangst i det nordlige Norge. Bergen: John Griegs Forlag, 1902.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobsbawm, Eric John, and Ranger, Terence Osborn. The Invention of Tradition. Past and Present Publications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.Google Scholar
Holm, Fynn. ‘After Withdrawal from the IWC: The Future of Japanese Whaling’. The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 17, no. 4 (15 February 2019): 116.Google Scholar
Holm, FynnBringing Fish to the Shore: Fishermen’s Knowledge and the Anti-Whaling Protests in Norway and Japan, 1900–12’. Journal of Global History 16, no. 3 (November 2021): 355–74.Google Scholar
Holm, FynnThe Whales and the Tsunami: The Reconstruction and Reinvention of the “Whaling Town” Ayukawa’. In Das ländliche Japan zwischen Idylle und Verfall, edited by Lewerich, Ludgera, Sieland, Theresa, and Thelen, Timo, 95120. Düsseldorf: Düsseldorf University Press, 2020.Google Scholar
Holm, Petter. ‘Crossing the Border: On the Relationship between Science and Fishermen’s Knowledge in a Resource Management Context’. Maritime Studies 2, no. 1 (2003): 533.Google Scholar
Holmlund, Cecilia M., and Hammer, Monica. ‘Ecosystem Services Generated by Fish Populations’. Ecological Economics 29, no. 2 (May 1999): 253–68.Google Scholar
Honda, Hiroko. ‘Satoyama-Satoumi no bunka to seitaikei sa-bisu no hensen’. Chiba-ken seibutsu tayōsei senta- kenkyū hōkoku 2 (2010): 3953.Google Scholar
Hopson, Nathan. Ennobling Japan’s Savage Northeast: Tōhoku as Postwar Thought, 1945–2011. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2017.Google Scholar
The House of Representatives. ‘Dai 181-kai nōrinsuisan iinkai’. 2012. www.shugiin.go.jp/internet/itdb_kaigiroku.nsf/html/kaigiroku/000918120121114003.htm.Google Scholar
Howell, David L. Capitalism from Within: Economy, Society, and the State in a Japanese Fishery. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Howell, David L.Fecal Matters: Prolegomenon to a History of Shit in Japan’. In Japan at Nature’s Edge: The Environmental Context of a Global Power, edited by Miller, Ian Jared, Thomas, Julia Adeney, and Walker, Brett L., 137–51. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Howell, David L.Foreign Encounters and Informal Diplomacy in Early Modern Japan’. The Journal of Japanese Studies 40, no. 2 (January 2014): 295327.Google Scholar
Hughes, J. Donald. North American Indian Ecology. El Paso: Texas Western Press, 1996.Google Scholar
Ingold, Tim. ‘The Use and Abuse of Ethnography’. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24, no. 2 (April 2001): 337.Google Scholar
Ishida, Yoshikazu. Nihon gyominshi. Tokyo: Sanichi Shobō, 1978.Google Scholar
Ishii, Atsushi. Kaitai shinsho ‘hogei ronsō’. Tokyo: Shinhyōron, 2011.Google Scholar
Ishinomaki shishi hensan iinkai. Ishinomaki no rekishi: Minzoku Seikatsu. Vol. 3. Ishinomaki: Ishinomaki-shi, 1988.Google Scholar
Ishinomaki shishi hensan iinkai Ishinomaki no rekishi: Sangyō Kōtsūhen. Vol. 5. Ishinomaki: Ishinomaki-shi, 1997.Google Scholar
Ishinomaki shishi hensan iinkai Ishinomaki no rekishi: Shiryōhen 3 Kinsei. Vol. 9. Ishinomaki: Ishinomaki-shi, 1990.Google Scholar
Ishinomaki shishi hensan iinkai Ishinomaki no rekishi: Tsūshihen (Shita no 1). Vol. 2. Ishinomaki: Ishinomaki-shi, 1998.Google Scholar
Itabashi, Morikuni. ‘Kita no hogeiki’. Hokkaidō Shimbunsha, 1989.Google Scholar
Itoh, Mayumi. The Japanese Culture of Mourning Whales. Singapore: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.Google Scholar
Iwaori, Masami. Hachinohe-ura ‘kujira jiken’ to gyomin. Hachinohe: Hachinoheura ‘Kujira Jiken’ to Gyomin Kenkō Iinkai, 2011.Google Scholar
Iwasaki, Masami. ‘Ainu minzoku kujira riyō bunka no ashiato wo tadoru’. Hokkai gakuen daigaku eibei bunka gakka 21 (March 2002): 111–46.Google Scholar
Iwasaki, Masami, and Nomoto, Masahiro. ‘Nihon ni okeru kita no umi no hogei’. In Hogei no bunka jinruigaku, edited by Kishigami, Nobuhiro, 172–86. Tokyo: Seizandō Shoten, 2012.Google Scholar
Iwasaki-Goodman, Masami. ‘An Analysis of Social and Cultural Change in Ayukawa-Hama (Ayukawa Shore Community)’. PhD Thesis, University of Alberta, 1994.Google Scholar
Iwasaki-Goodman, Masami Ningen to kankyō to bunka: kujira wo jiku ni shita kōsatsu. Tokyo: Shimizu kōbundō shobō, 2005.Google Scholar
Iwate-ken, , ed. Iwate-ken gyogyōshi. Morioka: Iwate-ken, 1984.Google Scholar
Jackson, Jeremy B. C., Alexander, Karen E., and Sala, Enric. Shifting Baselines: The Past and the Future of Ocean Fisheries. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Jackson, Terrence. Network of Knowledge: Western Science and the Tokugawa Information. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Jacoby, Karl. Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Jansen, Marius B.Rangaku and Westernization’. Modern Asian Studies 18, no. 4 (1984): 541–53.Google Scholar
Japan Satoyama Satoumi Assessment. Satoyama-Satoumi Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Socio-Ecological Production Landscapes of Japan. Summary for Decision Makers. Tokyo: United Nations University, 2010.Google Scholar
Japan Times. ‘Japanese Whales’. 15 August 1911.Google Scholar
Japan Times ‘Miyagi Whaling Town Has Seen Better Days’. 23 June 2010.Google Scholar
Japan Times ‘A Suspicious Whaling Vessel in Korean Channel’. 13 July 1904.Google Scholar
Japan Times ‘Whaling Lucrative Business’. 16 March 1911.Google Scholar
Japan Times & Mail. ‘Protect the Whale’. 13 May 1930.Google Scholar
Jones, Ryan Tucker. Red Leviathan: The Secret History of Soviet Whaling. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2022.Google Scholar
Jones, Ryan TuckerRunning into Whales: The History of the North Pacific from below the Waves’. The American Historical Review 118, no. 2 (April 2013): 349–77.Google Scholar
Jones, Ryan TuckerA Whale of a Difference: Southern Right Whale Culture and the Tasman World’s Living Terrain of Encounter’. Environment and History 25, no. 2 (May 2019): 185218.Google Scholar
Jones, Ryan Tucker, and Wanhalla, Angela. ‘Introduction’. In New Histories of Pacific Whaling, edited by Jones, Ryan Tucker and Wanhalla, Angela, 57. RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society. Munich: Rachel Carson Center, 2019.Google Scholar
Jones, Ryan Tucker, and Wanhalla, Angela eds. New Histories of Pacific Whaling. RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society. Munich: Rachel Carson Center, 2019.Google Scholar
Jones, Sam. ‘Dolphins Save Swimmers from Shark’. The Guardian, 24 November 2004. www.theguardian.com/science/2004/nov/24/internationalnews.Google Scholar
Josephson, Elizabeth, Smith, Tim D., and Reeves, Randall R.. ‘Historical Distribution of Right Whales in the North Pacific’. Fish and Fisheries 9, no. 2 (1 June 2008): 155–68.Google Scholar
The Journal of the Fisheries Society of Japan. ‘The Decrease of Fish and Its Prevention’, no. 321 (June 1909): re. 1–3.Google Scholar
The Journal of the Fisheries Society of Japan ‘Fisheries and Our Farmers’, no. 332 (May 1910): re. 1–2.Google Scholar
The Journal of the Fisheries Society of Japan ‘Training Whaling Gunners’, no. 310 (July 1908): re. 3.Google Scholar
Judd, Richard W.Grass-Roots Conservation in Eastern Coastal Maine: Monopoly and the Moral Economy of Weir Fishing, 1893–1911’. Environmental Review: ER 12, no. 2 (Summer 1988): 81103.Google Scholar
Kaburagi, Yomio. ‘Kinkazanoki no gyōba ni tsuite’. Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō, no. 138 (December 1893): 1–8.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō. ‘Bei Kara Kanshiin Futari’. 6 October 1972.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Hogei jikkyō mo kōkai’. 8 August 1953.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Hogei seigen ha hanhada fukōkhei’. 26 October 1927.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Kinkazan hyakunin’. 8 July 1906.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Kinkazan-oki no hogei jigyō’. 21 February 1905.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Kinkazan-oki no hogei wo miru (Shita no 2)’. 29 June 1906.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Kujira No Hama Ni Roke-Tai’. 24 June 1957.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Kujira no kuyōtō’. 11 March 1933.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Masaka kinshi ni ha … ’. 6 November 1972.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Ninki Yobu Hogei Jigyō’. 14 August 1955.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Oshika hantō no gyogyō’. 24 June 1906.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Sanriku no gyohi gyōsha shinsai de daidageki’. 3 May 1933.Google Scholar
Kahoku Shimpō ‘Sū ha ooi ga rieki ga sukunai’. 17 August 1932.Google Scholar
Kajino, Tokuzō. Umi no yajū (kujira no machi). Tokyo: Shunyōdō Shoten, 1955.Google Scholar
Kajiwara, Hazuki. Surviving with Companion Animals in Japan Life after a Tsunami and Nuclear Disaster. Palgrave Studies in Animals and Social Problems. Cham: Springer International, 2020.Google Scholar
Kalland, Arne. Fishing Villages in Tokugawa Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Kalland, Arne, and Moeran, Brian. Japanese Whaling: End of an Era? London: Routledge, 1992.Google Scholar
Kamagasawa, Isao. Kinsei Sanriku no iwashi ami no hattatsu. Miyako: Kamagasawa Aiko, 2008.Google Scholar
Kamagasawa, Isao Yorikujira sōdō ‘Akamae wa hirumae’ no shiteki kōsatsu. Miyako: Kamagasawa Aiko, 2011.Google Scholar
Kamaishi-shi hensan iinkai, ed. Kamaishi Shishi. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1960.Google Scholar
Kaminaga, Eisuke. ‘Hokutō Ajia ni okeru kindai hogeigyō no reimei’. Surawu kenkyū 49 (2002): 5179.Google Scholar
Kano, Koshirō. ‘Nōji isho [1709]’. In Nihon nōsho zenshō, edited by Yamada, Tatsuo, Vol. 5, 3215. Tokyo: Nōsangyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1978.Google Scholar
Kanō, Nobuharu. ‘Nendaiki [1784]’. In Nihon nōsho zenshō, edited by Satō, Tsuneo, Tokunaga, Mitsutoshi, and Etō, Akihiko, Vol. 67, 205–58. Tokyo: Nōsangyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1998.Google Scholar
Karakuwa chōshi hensan iinkai. Karakuwa chōshi. Karakuwa: Karakuwa-chō, 1968.Google Scholar
Kasahara, Hiroshi. Nihon kinkai no hogeigyō to sono shigen. Tokyo: Nihon Suisan Kabushiki Kaisha Kenkyūjo, 1950.Google Scholar
Kasahara, Hiroshi Nihon kinkai no hogeigyō to sono shigen. Vol. Fuzu. Tokyo: Nihon Suisan Kabushiki Kaisha Kenkyūjo, 1950.Google Scholar
Kashiwagi, Shūran. ‘Denshichi kannōki [1837]’. In Nihon nōsho zenshō, edited by Satō, Tsuneo, Vol. 37, 61249. Tokyo: Nōsangyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1998.Google Scholar
Kasuya, Toshio, and Miyashita, Tomio. ‘Distribution of Sperm Whale Stocks in the North Pacific’. The Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute, no. 39 (1988): 3175.Google Scholar
Katō, Hidetoshi, ed. Hitodsukuri fūdoki. Vol. 3. Furusato no jito to chie Iwate. Tokyo: Nōsan Gyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1988.Google Scholar
Kato, Koji. Tsunami to kujira to pengin to. Tokyo: Shakai Hyōronsha, 2021.Google Scholar
Katō, Kōji, and Uni, Yoshikazu. ‘Roy Chapman Andrews no geirui chōsa shashin: Ayukawa 1910 nen -’. Tōhoku gakuin daigaku ronshū, rekishi to bunka, no. 55 (March 2017): 43179.Google Scholar
Kato, Kumi. ‘Prayers for the Whales: Spirituality and Ethics of a Former Whaling Community – Intangible Cultural Heritage for Sustainability’. International Journal of Cultural Property 14, no. 3 (August 2007): 283313.Google Scholar
Katsuyama, Toshiichi. Hokuriku Umi Ni Kujira Ga Kita Koro. Toyama: Katsura Shobō, 2016.Google Scholar
Kawanishi, Hidemichi. Tōhoku: Japan’s Constructed Outland. Translated by Nanyan Guo and Raquel Hill. Leiden, Boston: Brill, 2015.Google Scholar
Kawasaki, Tsuyoshi. Regime Shift: Fish and Climate Change. Sendai: Tohoku University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Kesennuma shishi hensan iinkai. Kesennuma shishi: Kinsei. Vol. 3. Kesennuma: Kesennuma-shi, 1990.Google Scholar
Kesennuma shishi hensan iinkai Kesennuma shishi: Sangyōhen. Vol. 5–2. Kesennuma: Kesennuma-shi, 1997.Google Scholar
Kesennuma shishi hensan iinkai Kesennuma shishi: Shiryōhen. Vol. 8. Kesennuma: Kesennuma-shi, 1995.Google Scholar
Kijima, Jinkyū. Nihon gyogyōshi ronkō. Tokyo: Seibi Shokaku, 1944.Google Scholar
Kikuchi, Isao. ‘Kikinshi no riariti-: Sendai-han Tenpō 7/8 nen no kikin no baai’. Kirisutokyō bunka kenkyūshitsu kenkyū nenpō, no. 47 (2013): 127.Google Scholar
Kinji, Ketō. Kita Tōhoku no tatoe. Morioka: Iwate Nipōsha, 1994.Google Scholar
Kinsei sonraku kenkyūkai. Sendai-han nōsei no kenkyū. Tokyo: Nihon Gakujutsu Shinkōkai, 1958.Google Scholar
Klein, Emily S., and Thurstan, Ruth H.. ‘Acknowledging Long-Term Ecological Change: The Problem of Shifting Baselines’. In Perspectives on Oceans Past, edited by Máñez, Kathleen Schwerdtner and Poulsen, Bo, 1129. Dordrecht: Springer, 2016.Google Scholar
Knight, Catherine. ‘The Discourse of “Encultured Nature” in Japan: The Concept of Satoyama and Its Role in 21st-Century Nature Conservation’. Asian Studies Review 34, no. 4 (December 2010): 421–41.Google Scholar
Koga, Yasushi. ‘Saikai hogeigyō ni okeru geiniku ryūtsū’. Kyūshū daigaku sōgō kenkyū hakubutsukan kenkyū hōkoku 9 (March 2011): 4767.Google Scholar
Komatsu, Masayuki. Yoku wakaru kujira ronsō: Hogei no mirai o hiraku. Tokyo: Seizandō Shoten, 2005.Google Scholar
Komatsu, Masayuki, and Misaki, Shigeko. The Truth Behind the Whaling Dispute. Tokyo: Institute of Cetacean Research, 2001.Google Scholar
Komatsu, Muneo. Uminari no ki: Sanriku gyogyō no ayumi. Kesennuma: Miyagiken Kitabu Katsuo Maguro Gyogyō Kyōdō Kumiai, 1973.Google Scholar
Kondō, Isao. Nihon engan hogei no kōbō. Kokubunji-shi: Sanyōsha, 2001.Google Scholar
Konishi, Kenji, Tamura, Tsutomu, Isoda, Tatsuya et al. ‘Feeding Strategies and Prey Consumption of Three Baleen Whale Species Within the Kuroshio-Current Extension’. Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science, no. 42 (2009): 2740.Google Scholar
Kopnina, Helen. ‘The Lorax Complex: Deep Ecology, Ecocentrism and Exclusion’. Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences 9, no. 4 (December 2012): 235–54.Google Scholar
Krech, Shepard. The Ecological Indian: Myth and History. New York: W. W. Norton, 1999.Google Scholar
Kreitman, Paul. ‘Feathers, Fertilizer and States of Nature: Uses of Albatrosses in the U.S.-Japan Borderlands’. PhD Thesis, Princeton University, 2015.Google Scholar
Kushiro-shi chiiki shiryō shitsuhen. Kushiro hogeishi. Kushiro: Kushiro-shi, 2006.Google Scholar
Lajus, Dmitry L., Lajus, Julia A., Dmitrieva, Zoya V., Kraikovski, Alexei V., and Alexandrov, Daniel A.. ‘The Use of Historical Catch Data to Trace the Influence of Climate on Fish Populations: Examples from the White and Barents Sea Fisheries in the 17th and 18th Centuries’. ICES Journal of Marine Science 62, no. 7 (January 2005): 1426–35.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno. ‘Agency at the Time of the Anthropocene’. New Literary History 45, no. 1 (April 2014): 118.Google Scholar
Lauer, Matthew, and Aswani, Shankar. ‘Indigenous Ecological Knowledge as Situated Practices: Understanding Fishers’ Knowledge in the Western Solomon Islands’. American Anthropologist 111, no. 3 (2009): 317–29.Google Scholar
Lavigne, David M.Marine Mammals and Fisheries: The Role of Science in the Culling Debate’. In Marine Mammals: Fisheries, Tourism and Management Issues, edited by Gales, Nick, Hindell, Mark, and Kirkwood, Roger, 3147. Victoria: CSIRO, 2003.Google Scholar
LeCain, Timothy. ‘Against the Anthropocene: A Neo-materialist Perspective’. International Journal for History, Culture and Modernity (April 2015): 128.Google Scholar
Lewis, Simon L., and Maslin, Mark. The Human Planet: How We Created the Anthropocene. London: Pelican, 2018.Google Scholar
Lindemuth, John R.Composition of Certain Fish Fertilizers from the Pacific Coast and the Fertilizer Value of Degreased Fish Scrap’. The Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry 7 (July 1915): 615–19.Google Scholar
Lindstrøm, Ulf, Smout, Sophie, Howell, Daniel, and Bogstad, Bjarte. ‘Modelling Multi-Species Interactions in the Barents Sea Ecosystem with Special Emphasis on Minke Whales and Their Interactions with Cod, Herring and Capelin’. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, The Proceedings of the ECONORTH Symposium on Ecosystem Dynamics in the Norwegian Sea and Barents Sea 56, no. 21 (October 2009): 2068–79.Google Scholar
Lockyer, C.Growth and Energy Budgets of Large Baleen Whales from the Southern Hemisphere’. Mammals in the Sea 5, no. 3 (1981): 379487.Google Scholar
Longhurst, Alan. Ecological Geography of the Sea. London: Academic Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Lorenzen, Eline D., Nogués-Bravo, David, Orlando, Ludovic et al. ‘Species-Specific Responses of Late Quaternary Megafauna to Climate and Humans’. Nature 479, no. 7373 (November 2011): 359–64.Google Scholar
Maeda, Keijirō, and Teraoka, Girō. Hogei. Tokyo: Suisan shūhō shain satsubu, 1952.Google Scholar
Maeda, Toshimi. Hachinohe-han shiryōhen. Hachinohe: Ikichi Shoin, 1973.Google Scholar
MAFF. ‘Dai 4 kai geirui hokaku chōsa ni kansuru kentō iinkai giji gaiyō’. 2011. www.jfa.maff.go.jp/j/study/enyou/pdf/gizigaiyo4_1.pdf.Google Scholar
Mageli, Eldrid. ‘Norwegian–Japanese Whaling Relations in the Early 20th Century’. Scandinavian Journal of History 31, no. 1 (March 2006): 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maki, Naomasa. ‘Noeruē-shiki hogei gōdō ni kan suru iken’. Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō, no. 316 (January 1909): 46.Google Scholar
Makino, Mitsutaku, ed. Fisheries Management in Japan: Its Institutional Features and Case Studies. Fish & Fisheries Series 34. Dordrecht: Springer Science+Business Media B.V, 2011.Google Scholar
Malhi, Yadvinder, Doughty, Christopher E., Galetti, Mauro et al. ‘Megafauna and Ecosystem Function from the Pleistocene to the Anthropocene’. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113, no. 4 (26 January 2016): 838–46.Google Scholar
Manga Nihon Mukashibanashi Webpage. ‘Manga Nihon Mukashibanashi – Dattabessu – Kujiraishi’. 5 September 2012. http://nihon.syoukoukai.com/modules/stories/index.php?lid=827.Google Scholar
Mantua, Nathan J., and Hare, Steven R.. ‘The Pacific Decadal Oscillation’. Journal of Oceanography 58, no. 1 (1 February 2002): 3544.Google Scholar
Marcon, Federico. The Knowledge of Nature and the Nature of Knowledge in Early Modern Japan. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Martin, J. A.When Sharks (Don’t) Attack: Wild Animal Agency in Historical Narratives’. Environmental History 16, no. 3 (July 2011): 451–5.Google Scholar
Martinsen, Siri. ‘Whales in Norway’. In Whales and Dolphines: Cognition, Culture, Conversation and Human Perceptions, edited by Brakes, Philippa and Simmonds, Mark Peter, 7688. London: Earthscan, 2011.Google Scholar
Mason, Michele M. Dominant Narratives of Colonial Hokkaido and Imperial Japan: Envisioning the Periphery and the Modern Nation-State. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.Google Scholar
Matsuzaki, Masahiro. ‘Noeruē-shiki hogeigyō no hinan wo benzu’. Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō, 1910.Google Scholar
Matthews, John A., and Briffa, Keith R.. ‘“The Little Ice Age”: Re-evaluation of an Evolving Concept’. Geografiska Annaler 87 A, no. 1 (2005): 1736.Google Scholar
Mazard, Sophie, Penesyan, Anahit, Ostrowski, Martin, Paulsen, Ian T., and Egan, Suhelen. ‘Tiny Microbes with a Big Impact: The Role of Cyanobacteria and Their Metabolites in Shaping Our Future’. Marine Drugs 14, no. 5 (May 2016): 97.Google Scholar
McCarter, Joe, and Gavin, Michael C.. ‘In Situ Maintenance of Traditional Ecological Knowledge on Malekula Island, Vanuatu’. Society & Natural Resources 27, no. 11 (November 2014): 1115–29.Google Scholar
McCauley, Douglas J., Pinsky, Malin L., Palumbi, Stephen R. et al. ‘Marine Defaunation: Animal Loss in the Global Ocean’. Science 347, no. 6219 (16 January 2015): 1255641.Google Scholar
McEvoy, Arthur F. The Fisherman’s Problem: Ecology and Law in the California Fisheries, 1850–1980. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Mcomie, William. ‘Of Whale Oil and the Spirit of Adventure: American Seamen in Japan, 1846–1850’. Jinbungaku Kenkyū Shohō, no. 52 (August 2014): 2758.Google Scholar
Miller, Ian Jared. The Nature of the Beasts: Empire and Exhibition at the Tokyo Imperial Zoo. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Mitani, Hiroshi. Escape from Impasse: The Decision to Open Japan. Translated by David Noble. LTCB International Library Selection No. 20. Tokyo: International House of Japan, 2006.Google Scholar
Miura, Shigekazu. Zusetsu Chiba-ken no rekishi. Tokyo: Kawade Shobō Shinsha, 1989.Google Scholar
Miyagi kenshi hensan iinkai. Miyagi kenshi: Sangyōhen 2. Vol. 10. Sendai: Miyagi Kenshi Kenkōkai, 1958.Google Scholar
Miyagi-ken suisan shikenjō. ‘Miyagi-ken suisan shikenjō jigyō hōkoku’. Sendai, 1909.Google Scholar
Miyashita, Akira. Katsuobushi. Tokyo: Hōsei Daigaku Shuppan Kyoku, 2000.Google Scholar
Miyashita, Akira Katsuobushi. Vol. 1. Tokyo: Nihon Katsuobushi Kyōkai, 1989.Google Scholar
Miyazaki, Yasuda. ‘Nōgyō yensho [1697]’. In Nihon nōsho zenshō, edited by Yamada, Tatsuo, Vol. 12. Tokyo: Nōsangyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1978.Google Scholar
Mori, Hiroko, and Miyazaki, Katsunori. Kujiratori no shakaishi: Shi-boruto ya Edo no gakushatachi ga mita nihon hogei. Fukuoka: Karansha, 2016.Google Scholar
Morikawa, Jun. Whaling in Japan: Power, Politics and Diplomacy. New York: Columbia University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Morishita, Joji. ‘What is the Ecosystem Approach for Fisheries Management?’. Marine Policy 32, no. 1 (January 2008): 1926.Google Scholar
Morita, Katsuaki. ‘“Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō (koku)” ni okeru kujira, hogei kanren kiji (1): Meiji 15-nen (1882) kara Meiji 26-nen (1893) made’. Kōnan Joshi Daigaku Kenkyū Kiyō, no. 34 (March 1998): 1329.Google Scholar
Morita, Katsuaki Kujira to hogei no bunkashi. Nagoya: Nagoya Daigaku Shuppankai, 1994.Google Scholar
Morita, Katsuaki ‘Shokuminchi shihaika no Kanhantō engan hogei to nihon no kogata engan hogei bunka no seisei’. Nagoya Daigaku, 2009, 4352. Conference paper.Google Scholar
Morris-Suzuki, Tessa. ‘The Invention and Reinvention of “Japanese Culture”’. The Journal of Asian Studies 54, no. 3 (1995): 759–80.Google Scholar
Mossap, Joanna. ‘When Is a Whale Sanctuary Not a Whale Sanctuary: Japanese Whaling in Australian Antarctic Maritime Zones’. Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 36, no. 4 (2005): 757–74.Google Scholar
Naess, Arne. ‘The Shallow and the Deep, Long‐Range Ecology Movement: A Summary’. Inquiry 16, nos. 1–4 (January 1973): 95100.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Yōichirō. Iruka to Nihonjin. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 2017.Google Scholar
Nakazono, Shigeo. Kujiratori no keifu: Gaisetsu Nihon hogeishi. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Shinbunsha, 2006.Google Scholar
Nakazono, ShigeoWhaling Activities of Ikitsuki Islanders’. In The 1st Summit of Japanese Traditional Whaling Communities: Nagato, Yamaguchi, edited by The Institute of Cetacean Research, 133–49. Nagato: The Institute of Cetacean Research, 2003.Google Scholar
Nakazono, Shigeo, and Yasunaga, Hiroshi. Kujiratori emonogatari. Fukuoka: Gen Shobō, 2009.Google Scholar
Natori, Takemitsu. Funka-wan ainu no hogei. Sapporo: Kitahō Bunka Shuppansha, 1945.Google Scholar
Natural History Magazine. ‘Save the Seal!’. November 2009. www.naturalhistorymag.com/exploring-science-and-nature/131929/save-the-seal.Google Scholar
Naumann, Nelly. ‘Whale and Fish Cult in Japan: A Basic Feature of Ebisu Worship’. Asian Folklore Studies 33, no. 1 (1 January 1974): 115.Google Scholar
Naumann, Nelly“Yama No Kami”: Die Japanische Berggottheit (Teil I: Grundvorstellungen)’. Asian Folklore Studies 22 (1963): 133366.Google Scholar
Neff, Robert. ‘Russian Whaling in Korea’. Jeju Weekly, 27 June 2011. www.jejuweekly.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=1708.Google Scholar
Newton, John. A Savage History: Whaling in the Pacific and Southern Oceans. Sydney: New South, 2013.Google Scholar
NHK. ‘Shinkankō Ru-to: Oshika Kobaruto Rain’. In Shin-Nihon Kikō 2 (Tōhoku), edited by NHK, 7292. Tokyo: Shinjinbutsu Ōrai-sha, 1972.Google Scholar
Niemi, Einar. ‘Modern Whaling on the Norwegian Arctic Coast: Origin, Development and the Local Society’. In Whaling and History: Perspectives on the Evolution of the Industry, edited by Basberg, Bjørn I, Ringstad, Jan Erik, and Wexelsen, Einar, 6780. Sandefjord: Kommander Chr. Christensens Hvalfangstmuseum, 1993.Google Scholar
Nihon jidō bungakusha kyōkai. Aomori-ken no minwa. Furusato no minwa 39. Tokyo: Kaiseisha, 1982.Google Scholar
Nippon Times. ‘Steady Flow of Whale Meat is Envisioned as Fishing Fleet Being Groomed for Action’. 26 February 1946.Google Scholar
Nippon Times ‘Whaling Industry is Vital for Welfare of Japanese’. 17 February 1949.Google Scholar
Nishiwaki, Masaharu. ‘Kujira Matsuri’. Sannen No Gakushū, December 1954.Google Scholar
Nōshōkō. ‘Jūyō gyogyō no hōkyō oyobu shūkakudaka hōkoku hogei konkyochi secchi negai no ken’. Sendai, 1910. Meiji 43/0149. Miyagi Prefectural Archive.Google Scholar
Nōshōkō ‘Meiji 44 nen – Seisan chōsasho – Naganen hozon – Oshika-gun’. Sendai, 1910. Meiji 43/0189. Miyagi Prefectural Archive.Google Scholar
Nōshōkō ‘Nōshōkō – Hiryō’. Sendai, 1925. Taishō 14/0135. Miyagi Prefectural Archive.Google Scholar
Notehelfer, Fred G. ‘Japan’s First Pollution Incident’. Journal of Japanese Studies 1, no. 2 (1975): 351–83.Google Scholar
Ogatsu-machi kyōdoshi hensan iinkai. Ogatsu machishi. Sendai: Miyagi-ken Monō-gun Ogatsu-machi, 1961.Google Scholar
Ogilvie, Sheilagh C., and Cerman, Markus. ‘The Theories of Proto-Industrialization’. In European Proto-Industrialization, edited by Ogilvie, Sheilagh C. and Cerman, Markus, 111. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.Google Scholar
Okamura, Masayuki. Kujira to hogei no monogatari. Nagato: Fujimitsu Kabushiki Kaisha, 2006.Google Scholar
Okamura, MasayukiModern Whalers of Nagato Kitaura’. In The 4th Summit of Japanese Traditional Whaling Communities, Muroto, Kochi: Report and Proceedings, edited by The Institute of Cetacean Research, 103–10. Shimonoseki: The Institute of Cetacean Research, 2006.Google Scholar
Okumura, Jōtarō. Kujira no haha. Osaka: Okesha, 1950.Google Scholar
Ōkura, Nagatsune. ‘Jokōroku [1826]’. In Nihon nōsho zenshō, edited by Yamada, Tatsuo, Vol. 15, 3118. Tokyo: Nōsangyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1977.Google Scholar
Omura, Hideo. ‘Bryde’s Whale from the Coast of Japan’. The Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute, no. 14 (September 1959): 133.Google Scholar
Omura, HideoWhales in the Adjacent Waters of Japan’. The Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute, no. 4 (August 1950): 27113.Google Scholar
Onagawa chōshi hensai iinkai. Onagawa chōshi. Onagawa: Onagawa-chō, 1960.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō. ‘Bōdō jiken to chōsa’. 16 November 1911.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Dai-Nihon hogei kaisha no kikaku’. 10 April 1909.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Gyomin no chinjō shotei shutsu’. 10 April 1909.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Hogei konkyochi no secchi’. 7 October 1910.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Hogei mondai ni tsuite’. 13 April 1909.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Hogeijigyō no yūbō’. 25 June 1910.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Kaijōshiki ni okeru Ōashi-shi enzetsu no taii’. 13 June 1911.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Maihama gyōmin no daigekikō’. 22 June 1910.Google Scholar
Ōnan Shimpō ‘Same bōdō yoshin shūketsu’. 10 December 1911.Google Scholar
Ono, Hiroshi. ‘Iwaki no koshiki hogei: Iwaki Shichi-hama hogei emaki kara’. Iwaki-shi kyōiku bunka jigyōdan, no. 8 (1997): 4767.Google Scholar
Ono, Kyūzō. Aomoriken seijishi: Meiji kōkihen. Vol. 2. Aomori: Tōō Nippōsha, 1972.Google Scholar
Ōno, Shishiku. ‘Chōshi monogatari’. Bungei kurabu, 1907.Google Scholar
Oshika chōshi hensan iinkai. Oshika chōshi: Chūkan. Oshika: Oshika-chō, 2005.Google Scholar
Oshika chōshi hensan iinkai Oshika chōshi: Jōkan. Oshika: Oshika-chō, 1988.Google Scholar
Oshika-gun. Oshika gunshi. Ishinomaki: Miyagi-ken Oshika-gun, 1923.Google Scholar
Ōshima kyōdoshi kankō iinkai. Ōshimashi. Kesennuma: Ōshima Kyōdoshi Kankō Iinkai, 1982.Google Scholar
Ostrom, Elinor. ‘Coping with the Tragedies of the Commons’. Annual Review of Political Science 2, no. 1 (June 1999): 493535.Google Scholar
Ōsumi, Seiji. Kujira to Nihonjin. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2003.Google Scholar
Ōtsuki, Gentaku. ‘Muyū Kinkazanki (Record of Sleepwalking on Kinkazan)’. In Sendai sōsho, edited by Suzuki, Shōsō, Vol. 3, 465–83. Sendai: Sendai Sōsho Kankōkai, 1923.Google Scholar
Ōtsuki, Heisen. ‘Geishikō’. In Sendai sōsho, edited by Suzuki, Shōzō, Vol. 9, 69157. Sendai: Sendai Sōsho Kankōkai, 1926.Google Scholar
Ōtsuki, Heisen Geishikō. Edited by Ōya, Shinichi. Tokyo: Kowa Shuppan, 1976.Google Scholar
Payne, Brian. ‘Local Economic Stewards: The Historiography of the Fishermen’s Role in Resource Conservation’. Environmental History 18, no. 1 (January 2013): 2943.Google Scholar
Pitteloud, Cyrian. ‘L’affaire d’Ashio (extraction minière, Japon)’. La pensée écologique 1, no. 1 (October 2017).Google Scholar
Planque, Benjamin, Primicerio, Raul, Michalsen, Kathrine et al. ‘Who Eats Whom in the Barents Sea: A Food Web Topology from Plankton to Whales’. Ecology 95, no. 5 (2014): 1430.Google Scholar
Pratt, Edward E. Japan’s Protoindustrial Elite: The Economic Foundations of the Gōnō. Harvard East Asian Monographs. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 1999.Google Scholar
Qiu, Bo. ‘Kuroshio and Oyashio Currents’. In Encyclopedia of Ocean Sciences, edited by Steele, John H., Turekian, Karl K., and Thorpe, Seve A., Vol. 3, 1413–25. London: Academic Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Rambelli, Fabio. ‘General Introduction: The Sea in the History of Japanese Religions’. In The Sea and the Sacred in Japan: Aspects of Maritime Religion, edited by Rambelli, Fabio, xiixxiv. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018.Google Scholar
Read, Andrew J.The Looming Crisis: Interactions between Marine Mammals and Fisheries’. Journal of Mammalogy 89, no. 3 (June 2008): 541–8.Google Scholar
Reader, Ian, and Tanabe, George Joji. Practically Religious: Worldly Benefits and the Common Religion of Japan. Honolulu:University of Hawai‘i Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Reid, Joshua L. The Sea is My Country: The Maritime World of the Makahs, an Indigenous Borderlands People. The Henry Roe Cloud Series on American Indians and Modernity. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Reid, Joshua L.Whale People and Pacific Worlds’. In New Histories of Pacific Whaling, edited by Jones, Ryan Tucker and Wanhalla, Angela, 113–18. RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society. Munich: Rachel Carson Center, 2019.Google Scholar
Rekishi Misuteri- Kurabu. Zukai! Edo jidai. Tokyo: Mikasa Shōbō, 2015.Google Scholar
Roberts, Luke S. Mercantilism in a Japanese Domain: The Merchant Origins of Economic Nationalism in 18th-Century Tosa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Roberts, Luke S.The Petition Box in Eighteenth-Century Tosa’. Journal of Japanese Studies 20, no. 2 (1994): 423–58.Google Scholar
Roberts, Luke S.Shipwrecks and Flotsam: The Foreign World in Edo-Period Tosa’. Monumenta Nipponica 70, no. 1 (January 2015): 83122.Google Scholar
Rocha, Robert, Clapham, Phillip, and Ivashchenko, Yulia. ‘Emptying the Oceans: A Summary of Industrial Whaling Catches in the 20th Century’. Marine Fisheries Review 76, no. 4 (2014): 3748.Google Scholar
Rodgers, Rata Pryor. ‘The Connection of Māori to Whales’. Post-Graduate Certificate in Antartic Studies, 2017, 23.Google Scholar
Roman, Joe, Estes, James A., Morissette, Lyne et al. ‘Whales as Marine Ecosystem Engineers’. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12, no. 7 (September 2014): 377–85.Google Scholar
Roman, Joe, and McCarthy, James J.. ‘The Whale Pump: Marine Mammals Enhance Primary Productivity in a Coastal Basin’. PloS ONE 5, no. 10 (October 2010): e13255.Google Scholar
Rots, Aike P. ‘Forests of the Gods: Shinto, Nature, and Sacred Space in Contemporary Japan’. PhD Thesis, University of Oslo, 2013.Google Scholar
Ruddiman, William F. Plows, Plagues, and Petroleum: How Humans Took Control of Climate. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Ruddle, Kenneth, and Davis, Anthony. ‘What is “Ecological” in Local Ecological Knowledge? Lessons from Canada and Vietnam’. Society & Natural Resources 24, no. 9 (September 2011): 887901.Google Scholar
Rüegg, Jonas. ‘The Kuroshio Frontier: Business, State and Environment in the Making of Japan’s Pacific’. Doctoral Dissertation, Harvard University, 2022.Google Scholar
Rüegg, JonasMapping the Forgotten Colony: The Ogasawara Islands and the Tokugawa Pivot to the Pacific’. Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 6, no. 2 (2017): 440–90.Google Scholar
Ruzicka, James J., Steele, John H., Ballerini, Tosca, Gaichas, Sarah K., and Ainley, David G.. ‘Dividing up the Pie: Whales, Fish, and Humans as Competitors’. Progress in Oceanography 116 (September 2013): 207–19.Google Scholar
Saito, Mitsuko. ‘Nemawashi: A Japanese Form of Interpersonal Communication’. ETC: A Review of General Semantics 39, no. 3 (1982): 205–14.Google Scholar
Saito, Osamu. ‘Climate and Famine in Historic Japan: A Very Long-Term Perspective’. In Demographic Responses to Economic and Environmental Crises, edited by Kurosu, Satomi, Bengtsson, Tommy, and Campbell, Cameron, 272–81. Kashiwa: Reitaku University, 2014.Google Scholar
Sakurada, Katsunori. ‘The Ebisu-Gami in Fishing Villages’. In Studies in Japanese Folklore, edited by Dorson, Richard M., 122–32. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1963.Google Scholar
Sakurai, Hayato, and Ishihara, Yoshikata. Rikugei or Six Types of Whaling: Illustrations of Whales in Kumano. Mukai: Mie Prefecture Kumano Kodo Center, 2011.Google Scholar
Sasaki, Boukan. ‘Kyūkōryaku’. Sendai, 1833. National Diet Library. http://dl.ndl.go.jp/info:ndljp/pid/2535755.Google Scholar
Sasaki, Jōjin. ‘Sanriku kinkai no ōmono gyogyō’. In Hitodsukuri fudoki: Furusato no hito to chie Miyagi, edited by Watanabe, Nobuo, Vol. 4, 138–45. Furusato no hito to chie Miyagi. Tokyo: Nōsan Gyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1994.Google Scholar
Satō, Nobuhiro. ‘Baiyō hiroku [1840]’. In Nihon nōsho zenshō, edited by Yamada, Tatsuo, Vol. 69, 153406. Tokyo: Nōsangyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1996.Google Scholar
Satō, Ryōichi. Kujira kaisha yakiuchi jiken. Tokyo: Saimaru Shuppankai, 1987.Google Scholar
Savelle, James M., and Kishigami, Nobuhiro. ‘Anthropological Research on Whaling: Prehistoric, Historic and Current Contexts’. Senri Ethnological Studies 84 (August 2013): 148.Google Scholar
Schwach, Vera. ‘The Sea Around Norway: Science, Resource Management, and Environmental Concerns, 1860–1970’. Environmental History 18, no. 1 (January 2013): 101–10.Google Scholar
Schweder, Tore, Hagen, Gro S., and Hatlebakk, Einar. ‘Direct and Indirect Effects of Minke Whale Abundance on Cod and Herring Fisheries: A Scenario Experiment for the Greater Barents Sea’. NAMMCO Scientific Publications 2 (2000): 120–33.Google Scholar
Sekizawa, Akekiyo. ‘Hogei to nishinryō no kankei ikan’. Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō, January 1888.Google Scholar
Sekizawa, Akekiyo ‘Rokoku hogei kaisha setsuritsu no kyo wo kite kan ari’. Dai-Nihon suisan kaihō, December 1887.Google Scholar
Shimamura, Taikichi. ‘The Introduction of Harpoon Gun Whaling to Tosa Whaling’. In The 1st Summit of Japanese Traditional Whaling Communities: Nagato, Yamaguchi, edited by The Institute of Cetacean Research, 93116. Nagato: The Institute of Cetacean Research, 2003.Google Scholar
Shōbuke, Susumu. ‘Hachinohe-han no “yorikujira” to Hashikami-chō’. In Hashikami, edited by Shōbuke, Susumu, Vol. 64, 2333. Aomori: Kawaguchi Insatsu, 2008.Google Scholar
Shōbuke, Taneyasu. Nanbu mukashi gatari: Rekishi to densetsu. Hachinohe: Ikichi Shoin, 2009.Google Scholar
Shoemaker, Nancy. Living with Whales: Documents and Oral Histories of Native New England Whaling History. Native Americans of the Northeast. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Shoemaker, NancyWhale Meat in American History’. Environmental History 10, no. 2 (April 2005): 269–94.Google Scholar
Smeenk, Chris. ‘Strandings of Sperm Whales Physeter Macrocephalus in the North Sea: History and Patterns’. Bulletin de l’Institut Royal Des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique Biologie, no. 67 (1997): 1528.Google Scholar
Springer, A. M., Estes, J. A., van Vliet, G. B. et al. ‘Sequential Megafaunal Collapse in the North Pacific Ocean: An Ongoing Legacy of Industrial Whaling?’. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100, no. 21 (October 2003): 12223–8.Google Scholar
Starrs, Roy. Japanese Cultural Nationalism: At Home and in the Asia-Pacific. Kent: Global Oriental, 2004.Google Scholar
Stevens, Kate, and Wanhalla, Angela. ‘Māori Women in Southern New Zealand’s Shore-Whaling World’. RCC Perspectives, no. 5 (2019): 2330.Google Scholar
Stolz, Robert. Bad Water: Nature, Pollution, and Politics in Japan, 1870–1950. Durham: Duke University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Sugimoto, Takashige, Kuroda, Kazunori, Tsuboi, Morio, and Kuwae, Michinobu. ‘Shigen hendō no rekishiteki hensen: Komonjo to taisekibutsu koa- ni motoduku kaiyō kankyō to seibutsu seisan no suitei-’. Gekkan Kaiyō 37, no. 8 (2005): 563–7.Google Scholar
Sugita, Genpaku. Dawn of Western Science in Japan: Rangaku Kotohajime. Tokyo: Hokuseido Press, 1969.Google Scholar
Sugiura, Keiji. Tōgoku gyogyō no yoake to Kishū kaimin no katsuyaku. Tokyo: Seikosha, 2007.Google Scholar
Sumitake, Hiroshi. ‘Tenryō Hida no Ōhara sōdō: Meiwa, Anei, Tenmei no dai-ikki’. In Hitodsukuri Fūdoki: Furusato no hito to chie Gifu, edited by Sasaki, Shunsuke, Vol. 21, 83–9. Tokyo: Nōsan Gyoson Bunka Kyōkai, 1992.Google Scholar
Svenning, Jens-Christian. ‘Future Megafaunas: A Historical Perspective on the Potential for a Wilder Anthropocene’. In Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene, edited by Tsing, Anna, Bubandt, Nils, and Gan, Elaine, 6786, Kindle ed. Minneapolis: Combined Academic, 2017.Google Scholar
Tajima, Yoshiya. Kinsei Hokkaidō gyogyō to kaisan butsu ryūtsū. Osaka: Seibundō Shuppan, 2014.Google Scholar
Takahashi, Junichi. Kujira no Nihon bunkashi: Hogei bunka no kōseki wo tadoru. Kyoto: Tankōsha, 1992.Google Scholar
Takanarita, Tōru. ‘Hogei Kara Sekai Wo Miru’. Ishinomakigaku, no. 3 (August 2017): 97104.Google Scholar
Takeda, Jun. ‘An Ecological Study of Bear-Hunting Activities of the Matagi, Japanese Traditional Hunters’. Journal of Human Ergology 1, no. 2 (1972): 167–87.Google Scholar
Takimoto, Hisafumi, and Nasukawa, Itsuo. Sanriku kaigan to hamakaidō. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 2004.Google Scholar
Tameishi, Hideo, Saito, Katsuya, Nakasono, Yasuhiro et al. ‘Present State and Future about Application of Satellite Remote Sensing for Fisheries around Japan’. Fisheries Science 68, no. sup2 (2002): 1775–80.Google Scholar
Tanaka, Senichi. Ebisu no sekai: Zenkoku ebisu shinkō chōsa hōkokusho. Tokyo: Seijo Daigaku Daigakuin Bungaku Kenkyūka Nihon Jōmin Bunka Senkō Tanaka Senichi Kenkyūshitsu, 2003.Google Scholar
Taylor, Joseph E.Knowing the Black Box: Methodological Challenges in Marine Environmental History’. Environmental History 18, no. 1 (January 2013): 6075.Google Scholar
Terry, William M. Japanese Whaling Industry Prior to 1946. General Headquarters. Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers. Natural Resources Section Reports. Tokyo, 1950.Google Scholar
Thomas, Julia Adeney. Reconfiguring Modernity: Concepts of Nature in Japanese Political Ideology. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Thompson, E. P.The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century’. Past & Present 50, no. 1 (February 1971): 76136.Google Scholar
Toba, Yōshirō. ‘Toba Hogei’. Keiei Jōhō, January 1990.Google Scholar
Tōhoku nōseikyoku Ishinomaki tōkei jōhō shucchōjo. Michinoku kujira monogatari. Ishinomaki: Tōkei Senmon Senin Chihō Kenkyū, 1993.Google Scholar
Tōhoku rekishi hakubutsukan. Tokubetsuten: Nihonjin to kujira. Sendai: Tōhoku Rekishi Hakubutsukan, 2016.Google Scholar
Tōhoku rekishi shiryōkan. Sanriku engan no gyoson to gyogyō shūzoku: Gekan. Sendai: Miyagi-ken Bunkazai Hogokyūkai, 1985.Google Scholar
Tōhoku rekishi shiryōkan Sanriku engan no gyoson to gyogyō shūzoku: Jōkan. Sendai: Miyagi-ken Bunkazai Hogokyūkai, 1984.Google Scholar
Tōhoku rekishi shiryōkan Sanriku no gyogyō: Tegokibune no koro. Tagajōshi: Tōhoku Rekishi Shiryōkanhen, 1985.Google Scholar
Tokuyama, Shizuko. Kishū no minwa. Nihon no minwa. Tokyo: Miraisha, 1975.Google Scholar
Tønnessen, Johan N. Den moderne hvalfangsts historie: Oprinnelse og utvikling: Verdensfangsten 1883–1914. Vol. 2. Sandefjord: Norges Hvalfangstforbund, 1967.Google Scholar
Tønnessen, Johan N., and Johnsen, Arne O.. The History of Modern Whaling. Berkeley: Australian National University Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Torisu, Kyōichi. Nishikai hogeigyōshi no kenkyū. Fukuoka: Kyūshū Daigaku Shuppankai, 1993.Google Scholar
Totman, Conrad D. Early Modern Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Totman, Conrad D. The Green Archipelago: Forestry in Pre-industrial Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Townsend, Charles Haskins. ‘The Distribution of Certain Whales as Shown by Logbook Records of American Whaleships’. Zoologica: Scientific Contributions of the New York Zoological Society 19, no. 1 (3 April 1935): 318.Google Scholar
Toyota, Takeshi. Tōhoku no rekishi. 4th ed. Vol. 2. Tokyo: Tōhoku Daigaku Kokushi Danwakai, 1991.Google Scholar
Trites, Andrew W., Christensen, Villy, and Pauly, Daniel. ‘Competition between Fisheries and Marine Mammals for Prey and Primary Production in the Pacific Ocean’. Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science 22 (1997): 173–87.Google Scholar
Turner, Edith. ‘The Whale Decides: Eskimos’ and Ethnographer’s Shared Consciousness on the Ice’. Études/Inuit/Studies 14, no. 1/2 (1990): 3952.Google Scholar
Ui, Jun. Industrial Pollution in Japan. Tokyo: United Nations University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Uni, Yoshikazu. ‘Kinsei kindai no geiniku ryōri no shiyō bui to kindai Nihon ni okeru geinikushoku no fukyū katei’. Nihon setoroji- kenyū 28 (2018): 125.Google Scholar
Uni, YoshikazuRoy Chapman Andrews no geirui chōsa to Tōyō Hogei Ayukawa jigyōjō’. Tōhoku gakuin daigaku ronshū, rekishi to bunka, no. 55 (March 2017): 5567.Google Scholar
Uni, Yoshikazu ‘Senzenki nihon no engan hogei no jittai kaimei to bunkateki eikyō: 1890–1940 nendai no kindai engan hogei’. Tōkyō Nōgyō Daigaku, 2020. https://nodai.repo.nii.ac.jp/index.php?active_action=repository_view_main_item_detail&page_id=28&block_id=60&item_id=802&item_no=1.Google Scholar
Utenriksdepartementet. ‘32/07 Japan (Tokio) 1907’. Oslo Riksarkivet, RA/S-2259/Dd/L1002, 1907.Google Scholar
Utenriksdepartementet ‘32/08 Japan 1908’. Oslo Riksarkivet, RA/S-2259/De/L1163, 1908.Google Scholar
Utenriksdepartementet ‘32/10 Japan 1910’. Oslo Riksarkivet, RA/S-2259/De/L1358, 1912.Google Scholar
Utenriksdepartementet ‘32/12 Japan 1912’. Oslo Riksarkivet, RA/S-2259/Df/L1524/0006, 1912.Google Scholar
Verschuer, Charlotte von, and Cobcroft, Wendy. Rice, Agriculture, and the Food Supply in Premodern Japan. Needham Research Institute Series. London: Routledge, 2016.Google Scholar
Wada, Naoki. ‘Whaling, Culture and Traditions in Taiji’. In The 1st Summit of Japanese Traditional Whaling Communities: Nagato, Yamaguchi, edited by The Institute of Cetacean Research, 7991. Nagato: The Institute of Cetacean Research, 2003.Google Scholar
Wakayama kenshi hensan iinkai. Wakayama kenshi: Kinsei. Vol. 4. Wakayama: Wakayama-ken, 1990.Google Scholar
Walker, Brett L.Commercial Growth and Environmental Change in Early Modern Japan: Hachinohe’s Wild Boar Famine of 1749’. The Journal of Asian Studies 60, no. 2 (May 2001): 329–51.Google Scholar
Walker, Brett L. The Conquest of Ainu Lands: Ecology and Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Walker, Brett L. Toxic Archipelago: A History of Industrial Disease in Japan. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Walker, Brian H., and Salt, David. Resilience Thinking: Sustaining Ecosystems and People in a Changing World. Washington: Island Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Walthall, Anne. ‘Village Networks: Sο̄dai and the Sale of Edo Nightsoil’. Monumenta Nipponica 43, no. 3 (Autumn 1988): 279303.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Hiroyuki. Japan’s Whaling: The Politics of Culture in Historical Perspective. Translated by Hugh Clarke. Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Kaneo. Kadoyashiki kyūsuke oboechō: Kendan kyūsuke bunka bunsei tenpō no kiroku. Ōfunato: Kyōwa Insasatsu Kikaku Senta, 1994.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Shinobu. Miyagi no kenkyū: Kinsei 2. Vol. 4. Osaka: Seibundō Shuppan, 1983.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Takehiro. ‘Talking Sulfur Dioxide: Air Pollution and the Politics of Science in Late Meiji Japan’. In Japan at Nature’s Edge: The Environmental Context of a Global Power, edited by Miller, Ian Jared, Thomas, Julia Adeney, and Walker, Brett L., 7389. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Whitehead, Hal, and Rendell, Luke. The Cultural Lives of Whales and Dolphins. Kindle ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Whitridge, Peter. ‘The Prehistory of Inuit and Yupik Whale Use’. Revista de Arqueología Americana, no. 16 (1999): 99154.Google Scholar
Wigen, Kären. The Making of a Japanese Periphery, 1750–1920. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Wilhelm, Johannes. ‘Ressourcenmanagement in der japanischen Küstenfischerei’. PhD Thesis, Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, 2009.Google Scholar
Wilson, Noell. ‘Whaling at the Margins: Drift Whales, Ainu Laborers, and the Japanese State on the Nineteenth-Century Okhotsk Coast’. In New Histories of Pacific Whaling, edited by Jones, Ryan Tucker and Wanhalla, Angela, 51–5. RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society. Munich: Rachel Carson Center, 2019.Google Scholar
Worm, Boris, and Paine, Robert T.. ‘Humans as a Hyperkeystone Species’. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 31, no. 8 (1 August 2016): 600–7.Google Scholar
Yamagata, Shōichi. ‘Sasaki Nakazawa to Sasaki Bokuan: Bunsei jingo joshū kaibō wo megutte’. Nihon ishigaku zasshi 21, no. 1 (January 1975): 19.Google Scholar
Yamamoto, Tadashi. ‘Development of a Community-Based Fishery Management System in Japan’. Marine Resource Economics 10, no. 1 (1995): 2134.Google Scholar
Yamane, Seigo. Hachinohe no gyogyō: Kindaihen. Hachinohe: Hachinohe Shiritsu Toshokan Shishi Hensanshitsu, 2006.Google Scholar
Yamashita, Shōta. Hogei II. Tokyo: Hōsei Daigaku Shuppankyoku, 2004.Google Scholar
Yamaura, Kiyoshi. ‘Kōkogaku kara mita Nihon rettō ni okeru hogei’. In Hogei no bunka jinruigaku, edited by Kishigami, Nobuhiro, 137–53. Tokyo: Seizandō Shoten, 2012.Google Scholar
Yanagi, Tetsuo. Sato-Umi: A New Concept for Coastal Sea Management. Tokyo: Terrapub, 2007.Google Scholar
Yasunaga, Genta, Bando, Takeharu, Itoh, Nobuyuki, and Nakamura, Gen. Cruise Report of the Second Phase of the Japanese Whale Research Program under Special Permit in the Western North Pacific (JARPN II) in 2013 – (Part II) – Coastal Component off Sanriku Survey. Tokyo: Institute of Cetacean Research, 2013.Google Scholar
Yomiuri Shinbun. ‘Kujira to ikiru (4)’. 28 August 2008.Google Scholar
Yonemoto, Marcia. ‘Maps and Metaphors of the “Small Eastern Sea” in Tokugawa Japan (1603–1868)’. Geographical Review 89, no. 2 (1999): 169–87.Google Scholar
Yoshihara, Tomokichi. ‘Kujira no haka’. In Kujira, iruka no minzoku, edited by Tanigawa, Keiichi, 409–78. Tokyo: Sanichi Shobō, 1997.Google Scholar
Yoshioka, Itsuo. Hakujin ha iruka wo tabete mo OK de nihonjin ha NG no hontō no riyū. Tokyo: Kodansha, 2011.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Fynn Holm, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Germany
  • Book: The Gods of the Sea
  • Online publication: 10 August 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009305532.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Fynn Holm, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Germany
  • Book: The Gods of the Sea
  • Online publication: 10 August 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009305532.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Fynn Holm, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Germany
  • Book: The Gods of the Sea
  • Online publication: 10 August 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009305532.011
Available formats
×