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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, May 20, 2021 at 2:45 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Environment]: Pitts on Miller, 'Fir and Empire:
The Transformation of Forests in Early Modern China'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Ian Matthew Miller.  Fir and Empire: The Transformation of Forests in
Early Modern China.  Seattle  University of Washington Press, 2020.
296 pp.  $40.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-295-74734-7.

Reviewed by Larissa Pitts (Quinnipiac University)
Published on H-Environment (May, 2021)
Commissioned by Daniella McCahey

Fir and Empire is the first English-language monograph on early
modern Chinese forestry. Expanding on the work already begun by
Chinese and Taiwanese scholars, Ian M. Miller uses a reading of an
impressive range of gazetteers and other primary sources to create a
work that is of value not only to historians of China, but also to
environmental historians writ large. To those of us who happen to
inhabit both fields, it is a most welcome addition.

Miller's work details forest management practices in South China from
around 1000 to 1700 CE. In so doing, he offers an important
corrective to Mark Elvin's _Retreat of the Elephants: An
Environmental History of China_ (2004). Up until now, this
multimillennial survey has provided the dominant narrative for
understanding the human impact on Chinese environmental change, in
particular with regard to forest cover. Elvin argues that China
experienced a "Great Deforestation" over the entirety of its history
due to the expansion of human activity. The intensity of this
deforestation increased during the medieval period when commercial
activity increased, leading to the decimation of suitable woodland
habitat for large mammals, such as the Asian elephant, across Chinese
territory.

Miller does not dispute this narrative of the loss of old-growth
forests, and with it the elephants and rhinoceroses that once
inhabited coastal China. However, as Paul S. Sutter's compelling
foreword points out, Miller's work shows that China experienced a
"Great Reforestation" in its stead (p. x). This reforestation
movement was largely the result of independent tree farmers, who took
advantage of the Chinese state's retreat from governing woodlands to
plant trees that would supply the empire's (and the public's)
continual demands for timber. Contrary to what Elvin might have us
imagine, southern China was actually lush with woodlands cultivated
largely by local entrepreneurs.

This aspect of Miller's argument holds the most interest and
relevance to scholars whose focus is outside of China. Academic
studies of forest administration in Europe and East Asia have
primarily focused on state-directed bureaucratic and scientific
management practices. The state is hardly absent from _Fir and
Empire_. Yet for most of the time period Miller studies the state
does not play the defining role in forest management. The title of
this work is quite misleading in this regard.

Chapter 1 states that although there had been "self-conscious forms
of forest oversight" as early as the Qin Dynasty (221-207 BCE),
Miller finds these ended around the time of the Northern Song's
retreat from Jurchen invasion in 1127 CE (pp. 22-23). From the
twelfth to the seventeenth centuries, the "empire" was present as a
consumer of timber products, tax collector, tariff levier, and
codifier of property rights. In other words, the state was no more of
a presence in woodlands than it was in managing other forms of
private land use. The rise of a private market that "profited from
scarcity" (p. 18) ended up achieving the "Great Reforestation" that
made eighteenth-century Western travelers marvel at South China's
greenery (pp. 3-4).

Miller devotes the remaining chapters of _Fir and Empire _to more
detailed analyses of the origins and maintenance of this privatized
system of woodlands management. Chapters 2 and 3 highlight the ways
in which the Song, Yuan, and Ming states actively fostered the
transformation of woodlands into a commercial economy. Chapter 2
describes the process by which woodlands went "from open,
common-access landscapes into exclusive property" (p. 38) through
government land surveys and taxation. Chapter 3 demonstrates that the
Yuan and early Ming Dynasties expanded the number of households whose
taxable economies under the corvee labor system were devoted to
forest labor. This included activities such as hunting and
woodcutting. Later in the Ming Dynasty, reforms to this system
allowed for the slow but steady transformation of forest labor into
commercial labor (p. 19).

Miller begins to describe the exact nature of this commercial economy
in chapter 4, which focuses on the innovative practices of Huizhou
timber merchants. He finds that by the mid-sixteenth century absentee
shareholders held partial stakes in numerous timber plots, thereby
diversifying their risk in case any single plot be lost to disease,
fire, or theft (p. 86). In other words, not only was timber part of a
vibrant commercial economy, but it served as the basis of an early
modern stock market.

Chapters 5 through 7 describe the relationship between this vibrant
commercial economy and the Song, Yuan, and Ming states. Chapter 5
will be of special interest to environmental historians of Europe. It
details the functioning of the tariff timber system, which worked
both to secure each dynasty's timber supply as well as oversee the
market economy. Miller argues that European states such as Spain,
France, Holland, and England took an active role in managing domestic
timber and gaining logging colonies due to the fragmented nature of
European woodlands and trade routes. China, by contrast, had large
contiguous forestland and easily navigable waterways, which
disincentivized the state from taking a direct managerial role (p.
98). As chapters 6 and 7 show, Chinese states were able to rely on a
commercialized economy to undertake large-scale projects, such as the
construction of large navies (chapter 6) and palaces (chapter 7).
These chapters are accompanied by several striking images, such as a
detailed rendering of the individual components of a warship (p. 136)
and floating logs traveling through rapids (p. 151).

In short, Ian M. Miller has provided both historians of China and the
environment with valuable new perspectives and a wealth of
information. I highly recommended it for use by scholars in both
fields.

Citation: Larissa Pitts. Review of Miller, Ian Matthew, _Fir and
Empire: The Transformation of Forests in Early Modern China_.
H-Environment, H-Net Reviews. May, 2021.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=55663

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


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