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Reconceptualizing The Peasantry
A01=Michael Kearney
agrarian
Agrarian Question
anthropology
articulation
Articulation Theory
Author_Michael Kearney
Category Peasant
Category=JBSA
Category=JBSC
classical
Classical Anthropology
Complex Social Field
Contemporary Society
De Janvry
Deep Reconceptualization
differentiation
Disarticulated Economies
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Folk Urban Continuum
Frazerian Anthropology
Highland Mesoamerica
internal
Migrant Peasant Workers
Mixtec People
Mixteca Region
Noncapitalist Forms
Peasant Concept
Peasant Essentialism
Peasant Studies
post-World War Ii Context
question
Rational Actor Theory
Redfieldan Model
Social Reproduction
society
studies
theory
Vice Versa
War Ii
Product details
- ISBN 9780813309880
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 24 May 1996
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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The concept of ?peasant? has been constructed from residual images of pre-industrial European and colonial rural society. Spurred by Romantic sensibilities and modern nationalist imaginations, the images the word peasant brings to mind are anachronisms that do not reflect the ways in which rural people live today. In this path-breaking book, Michael Kearney shows how the concept has been outdistanced by contemporary history. He situates the peasantry within the current social context of the transnational and post?Cold War nation-state and clears the way for alternative theoretical views.Reconceptualizing the Peasantry looks at rural society in general and considers the problematic distinction between rural and urban. Most definitions of and debates about peasants have focused on their presumed social, economic, cultural, and political characteristics, but Kearney articulates the way in which peasants define themselves in a rapidly changing world. In the process, he develops ethnographic and political forms of representation that correspond to contemporary postpeasant identities. Moving beyond a reconsideration of peasantry, the book situates anthropology in global context, showing how the discipline reconstructs itself and its subjects according to changing circumstances.
Michael Kearney is professor of anthropology at the University of California at Riverside.
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