1. Easter Island as an icon; 2. From the east or the west?; 3. The green past; 4. Culture appears, nature disappears; 5. Makemake, moai, and the tangata manu; 6. Resilience and sustainability; 7. Foreigners; 8. Christianization, sheep breeding, and research; 9. The earth and Easter Island: doom and destiny.
Jan J. Boersema reconstructs the ecological and cultural history of Easter Island and critiques the hitherto accepted theory of its collapse.
Jan J. Boersema is Professor of Principles of Environmental Sciences at Leiden University. He is editor-in-chief of the Journal of Integrated Environmental Sciences and editor of the textbook Principles of Environmental Sciences (2009, with Lucas Reijnders). Diane Webb has translated numerous books and scholarly articles on historical and art-historical subjects. She was a member of the team that translated Vincent van Gogh: The Letters. In 2005 she was awarded the Vondel Prize for Dutch Translation.
'Jan J. Boersema's study demonstrates once more the 'collapse of
the Easter Island society', commonly advocated by Jared Diamond, to
be a myth based on shaky scientific ground. To the contrary, the
Rapa Nui people adapted to the challenges of isolation in a
marginal environment with remarkable resilience. This book, written
for a large audience, is a must-read for everyone interested in the
fascinating Isla de Pascua.' Morgan De Dapper, Past President,
Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences, Belgium
'In this book, Jan J. Boersema breaks with the consensus about an
ecological and cultural crash on Easter Island. In place of this
big collapse, he proves the adaptation of the Islanders to a new
landscape. A salutary book that sets the record straight.' Nicolas
Cauwe, Curator of Oceanic Antiquities, Royal Museums of Art, and
Professor, Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium
'In this new publication by Jan J. Boersema, the author questions
whether the history of Easter Island holds a message for planet
Earth and asks, 'What happened on Easter Island?' Readers will find
much to ponder in this well-written book, from the ecology to the
sustainability of life on a small and isolated island.' Georgia
Lee, Easter Island Foundation
'Boersema presents a convincing counter narrative about the
supposed 'collapse' of Easter Island. He does a masterful job of
weaving previous and contemporary scholarship on the island into
his account, while adding his own research based on accounts of
Dutch, Spanish, English and French explorers to the region in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries … This is a significant
contribution to our understanding of how small scale societies
interact with the biophysical environment. It is written by a
researcher concerned with facts instead of hyperbole. Easter Island
scholarship has experienced plenty of the latter, making Boersma's
book a refreshing and welcome read.' John Richard Stepp, Economic
Botany
'The Survival of Easter Island – Dwindling Resources and Cultural
Resilience by Jan J. Boersema is a must-read for anyone with a
serious interest in the cultural and environmental history of Rapa
Nui. Jan J. Boersema, who is Professor of Principles of
Environmental Sciences at Leiden University, is known to have been
a critic of the wildly popular 'collapse theory' for many years and
presents here an impressive body of work once and for all
disproving it … Jan J. Boersema is to be commended for presenting
such a conclusive body of evidence …' Anette Kühlem, Rapa Nui
Journal
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