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Wikipedia

Peasant

A peasant is a pre-industrial agricultural laborer or a farmer with limited land-ownership, especially one living in the Middle Ages under feudalism and paying rent, tax, fees, or services to a landlord.[1][2] In Europe, three classes of peasants existed: non-free slaves, semi-free [Serfdom|serfs]], and free tenants. Peasants might hold title to land outright (fee simple), or by any of several forms of land tenure, among them socage, quit-rent, leasehold, and copyhold.[3]

Young women offer berries to visitors to their izba home, 1909. Those who had been serfs among the Russian peasantry were officially emancipated in 1861. Photograph by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky.

In some contexts, "peasant" has a pejorative meaning, even when referring to farm laborers.[4] As early as in 13th-century Germany, the concept of "peasant" could imply "rustic" as well as "robber", as the English term villain[5]/villein.[6][7] In 21st-century English, the word "peasant" can mean "an ignorant, rude, or unsophisticated person".[8] The word rose to renewed popularity in the 1940s–1960s[9] as a collective term, often referring to rural populations of developing countries in general, as the "semantic successor to 'native', incorporating all its condescending and racial overtones".[4]

The word peasantry is commonly used in a non-pejorative sense as a collective noun for the rural population in the poor and developing countries of the world.[citation needed] Via Campesina, an organization claiming to represent the rights of about 200 million farm-workers around the world, self-defines as an "International Peasant's Movement" as of 2019.[10] The United Nations and its Human Rights Council prominently uses the term "peasant" in a non-pejorative sense, as in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas adopted in 2018. In general English-language literature, the use of the word "peasant" has steadily declined since about 1970.[11]

Etymology

 
A farm in 1794

The word "peasant" is derived from the 15th-century French word païsant, meaning one from the pays, or countryside; ultimately from the Latin pagus, or outlying administrative district.[12]

Social position

 
Finnish Savonian farmers at a cottage in early 19th century; by Pehr Hilleström and J. F. Martin

Peasants typically made up the majority of the agricultural labour force in a pre-industrial society. The majority of the people—according to one estimate 85% of the population—in the Middle Ages were peasants.[13]

Though "peasant" is a word of loose application, once a market economy had taken root, the term peasant proprietors was frequently used to describe the traditional rural population in countries where smallholders farmed much of the land. More generally, the word "peasant" is sometimes used to refer pejoratively to those considered to be "lower class", perhaps defined by poorer education and/or a lower income.[citation needed]

Medieval European peasants

The open field system of agriculture dominated most of Europe during medieval times and endured until the nineteenth century in many areas. Under this system, peasants lived on a manor presided over by a lord or a bishop of the church. Peasants paid rent or labor services to the lord in exchange for their right to cultivate the land. Fallowed land, pastures, forests, and wasteland were held in common. The open field system required cooperation among the peasants of the manor.[14] It was gradually replaced by individual ownership and management of land.

The relative position of peasants in Western Europe improved greatly after the Black Death had reduced the population of medieval Europe in the mid-14th century, resulting in more land for the survivors and making labor more scarce. In the wake of this disruption to the established order, it became more productive for many laborers to demand wages and other alternative forms of compensation, which ultimately led to the development of widespread literacy and the enormous social and intellectual changes of the Enlightenment.

The evolution of ideas in an environment of relatively widespread literacy laid the groundwork for the Industrial Revolution, which enabled mechanically and chemically augmented agricultural production while simultaneously increasing the demand for factory workers in cities, who became what Karl Marx called the proletariat. The trend toward individual ownership of land, typified in England by Enclosure, displaced many peasants from the land and compelled them, often unwillingly, to become urban factory-workers, who came to occupy the socio-economic stratum formerly the preserve of the medieval peasants.

This process happened in an especially pronounced and truncated way in Eastern Europe. Lacking any catalysts for change in the 14th century, Eastern European peasants largely continued upon the original medieval path until the 18th and 19th centuries. Serfdom was abolished in Russia in 1861, and while many peasants would remain in areas where their family had farmed for generations, the changes did allow for the buying and selling of lands traditionally held by peasants, and for landless ex-peasants to move to the cities.[15] Even before emancipation in 1861, serfdom was on the wane in Russia. The proportion of serfs within the empire had gradually decreased "from 45–50 percent at the end of the eighteenth century, to 37.7 percent in 1858."[16]

Early modern Germany

 
"Feiernde Bauern" ("Celebrating Peasants"), artist unknown, 18th or 19th century

In Germany, peasants continued to center their lives in the village well into the 19th century. They belonged to a corporate body and helped to manage the community resources and to monitor community life.[17] In the East they had the status of serfs bound permanently to parcels of land. A peasant is called a "Bauer" in German and "Bur" in Low German (pronounced in English like boor).[18]

In most of Germany, farming was handled by tenant farmers who paid rents and obligatory services to the landlord—typically a nobleman.[19] Peasant leaders supervised the fields and ditches and grazing rights, maintained public order and morals, and supported a village court which handled minor offenses. Inside the family the patriarch made all the decisions, and tried to arrange advantageous marriages for his children. Much of the villages' communal life centered on church services and holy days. In Prussia, the peasants drew lots to choose conscripts required by the army. The noblemen handled external relationships and politics for the villages under their control, and were not typically involved in daily activities or decisions.[20]

France

Information about the complexities of the French Revolution, especially the fast-changing scene in Paris, reached isolated areas through both official announcements and long-established oral networks. Peasants responded differently to different sources of information. The limits on political knowledge in these areas depended more on how much peasants chose to know than on bad roads or illiteracy. Historian Jill Maciak concludes that peasants "were neither subservient, reactionary, nor ignorant."[21]

In his seminal book Peasants into Frenchmen: the Modernization of Rural France, 1880–1914 (1976), historian Eugen Weber traced the modernization of French villages and argued that rural France went from backward and isolated to modern and possessing a sense of French nationhood during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[22] He emphasized the roles of railroads, republican schools, and universal military conscription. He based his findings on school records, migration patterns, military-service documents and economic trends. Weber argued that until 1900 or so a sense of French nationhood was weak in the provinces. Weber then looked at how the policies of the Third Republic created a sense of French nationality in rural areas.[23] The book was widely praised, but some[24] argued that a sense of Frenchness existed in the provinces before 1870.

Chinese farmers

Farmers in China have been sometimes referred to as "peasants" in English-language sources. However, the traditional term for farmer, nongfu (农夫), simply refers to "farmer" or "agricultural worker". In the 19th century, Japanese intellectuals reinvented the Chinese terms fengjian (封建) for "feudalism" and nongmin (农民), or "farming people", terms used in the description of feudal Japanese society.[25] These terms created a negative image of Chinese farmers by making a class distinction where one had not previously existed.[25] Anthropologist Myron Cohen considers these terms to be neologisms that represented a cultural and political invention. He writes:[26]

This divide represented a radical departure from tradition: F. W. Mote and others have shown how especially during the later imperial era (Ming and Qing dynasties), China was notable for the cultural, social, political, and economic interpenetration of city and countryside. But the term nongmin did enter China in association with Marxist and non-Marxist Western perceptions of the "peasant," thereby putting the full weight of the Western heritage to use in a new and sometimes harshly negative representation of China's rural population. Likewise, with this development Westerners found it all the more "natural" to apply their own historically derived images of the peasant to what they observed or were told in China. The idea of the peasant remains powerfully entrenched in the Western perception of China to this very day.

Modern Western writers often continue to use the term peasant for Chinese farmers, typically without ever defining what the term means.[27] This Western use of the term suggests that China is stagnant, "medieval", underdeveloped, and held back by its rural population.[28] Cohen writes that the "imposition of the historically burdened Western contrasts of town and country, shopkeeper and peasant, or merchant and landlord, serves only to distort the realities of the Chinese economic tradition".[29]

Latin American farmers

In Latin America, the term "peasant" is translated to "Campesino" (from campo—country person), but the meaning has changed over time. While most Campesinos before the 20th century were in equivalent status to peasants—they usually did not own land and had to make payments to or were in an employment position towards a landlord (the hacienda system), most Latin American countries saw one or more extensive land reforms in the 20th century. The land reforms of Latin America were more comprehensive initiatives[30] that redistributed lands from large landholders to former peasants[31]farm workers and tenant farmers. Hence, many Campesinos in Latin America today are closer smallholders who own their land and don't pay rent to a landlord—rather than peasants who don't own land.

Historiography

 
Portrait sculpture of 18th-century French peasants by artist George S. Stuart, in the permanent collection of the Museum of Ventura County, Ventura, California

In medieval Europe society was theorized as being organized into three estates: those who work, those who pray, and those who fight.[32] The Annales School of 20th-century French historians emphasized the importance of peasants. Its leader Fernand Braudel devoted the first volume—called The Structures of Everyday Life—of his major work, Civilization and Capitalism 15th–18th Century to the largely silent and invisible world that existed below the market economy.

Other research in the field of peasant studies was promoted by Florian Znaniecki and Fei Xiaotong, and in the post-1945 studies of the "great tradition" and the "little tradition" in the work of Robert Redfield. In the 1960s, anthropologists and historians began to rethink the role of peasant revolt in world history and in their own disciplines. Peasant revolution was seen as a Third World response to capitalism and imperialism.[33]

The anthropologist Eric Wolf, for instance, drew on the work of earlier scholars in the Marxist tradition such as Daniel Thorner, who saw the rural population as a key element in the transition from feudalism to capitalism. Wolf and a group of scholars[34][35][36][37] criticized both Marx and the field of Modernization theorists for treating peasants as lacking the ability to take action.[38] James C. Scott's field observations in Malaysia convinced him that villagers were active participants in their local politics even though they were forced to use indirect methods. Many of these activist scholars looked back to the peasant movement in India and to the theories of the revolution in China led by Mao Zedong starting in the 1920s. The anthropologist Myron Cohen, however, asked why the rural population in China were called "peasants" rather than "farmers", a distinction he called political rather than scientific.[39] One important outlet for their scholarly work and theory was The Journal of Peasant Studies.

See also

 
"Peasants in a Tavern" by Adriaen van Ostade (c. 1635), at the Alte Pinakothek, Munich
 
Monument dedicated to Serbian peasant, Jagodina

Related terms

References

  1. ^ "peasant". Wiktionary.
  2. ^ "peasant". Merriam-Webster online.
  3. ^ Webster, Hutton (2004). Early European History. Kessinger Publishing. p. 440. ISBN 978-1-4191-1711-4. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  4. ^ a b Hill, Polly (1982). Dry Grain Farming Families: Hausaland (Nigeria) and Karnataka (India) Compared. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521271028.
  5. ^ "villain". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  6. ^ "villein". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  7. ^ Edelman, Marc (2013). "What is a peasant? What are peasantries? A briefing paper on issues of definition" (PDF). United Nations Human Rights. Retrieved 11 September 2019. Very early on, both the English 'peasant,' the French 'paysan' and similar terms sometimes connoted 'rustic,' 'ignorant,' 'stupid,' 'crass' and 'rude,' among many other pejorative terms. [...] The word could also imply criminality, as in thirteenth-century Germany where '"peasant"' meant 'villain, rustic, devil, robber, brigand and looter.'
  8. ^ . Lexico Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on 12 July 2019. Retrieved 12 July 2019. 1 A poor farmer of low social status who owns or rents a small piece of land for cultivation (chiefly in historical use or with reference to subsistence farming in poorer countries)
    1.1 informal, derogatory An ignorant, rude, or unsophisticated person; a person of low social status.
  9. ^ "Google Ngram Viewer". books.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  10. ^ "Via Campesina – Globalizing hope, globalizing the struggle !". Via Campesina English. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  11. ^ "Google Ngram Viewer". books.google.com. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  12. ^ Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. pp. 846, 866. ISBN 978-0877795094
  13. ^ Alixe Bovey (30 April 2015). "Peasants and their role in rural life". The British Library. British Library. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  14. ^ Gies, Frances and Gies, Joseph (1989). Life in a Medieval Village New York: Harper. pp. 12–18. ISBN 978-0060920463
  15. ^ Moon, David (2001) The abolition of serfdom in Russia, 1762–1907. Routledge. pp. 98–114. ISBN 9780582294868
  16. ^ Pipes, Richard (1995) [1974]. Russia Under the Old Regime: Second edition. p. 163. ISBN 978-0140247688.
  17. ^ Sagarra, Eda (1977) A Social History of Germany: 1648–1914. Methuen young books. pp. 140–154. ISBN 978-0416776201
  18. ^ Wedgwood, Hensleigh (1855). "English Etymologies". Transactions of the Philological Society (8): 117–118.
  19. ^ The monasteries of Bavaria, which controlled 56% of the land, were broken up by the government, and sold off around 1803. Nipperdey, Thomas (1996) Germany from Napoleon to Bismarck: 1800–1866. Princeton Univ Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0691636115
  20. ^ For details on the life of a representative peasant farmer, who migrated in 1710 to Pennsylvania, see Bernd Kratz, he was a farmer, "Hans Stauffer: A Farmer in Germany before his Emigration to Pennsylvania," Genealogist, Fall 2008, Vol. 22 Issue 2, pp. 131–169
  21. ^ Maciak, Jill (2001). "Of News and Networks: The Communication of Political Information in the Rural South-West during the French Revolution". French History. 15 (3): 273–306. doi:10.1093/fh/15.3.273.
  22. ^ Amato, Joseph A. (1992). "Eugen Weber's France". Journal of Social History. 25 (4): 879–882. doi:10.1353/jsh/25.4.879. JSTOR 3788392.
  23. ^ Weber, Eugen (1980). "The Second Republic, Politics, and the Peasant". French Historical Studies. 11 (4): 521–550. doi:10.2307/286349. JSTOR 286349.
  24. ^ Margadant, Ted W. (1979). "French Rural Society in the Nineteenth Century: A Review Essay". Agricultural History. 53 (3): 644–651.
  25. ^ a b Cohen, p. 64
  26. ^ Cohen, p. 65
  27. ^ Cohen, p. 68
  28. ^ Mei, Yi-tsi (1998). Ideology, Power, Text: Self-Representation and the Peasant 'Other' in Modern Chinese Literature. Stanford University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0804733199
  29. ^ Cohen, p. 73
  30. ^ "The Agrarian Reform Law" (PDF). Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  31. ^ Delahaye, Oliver (2018). La Cuestión Agraria en Venezuela (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad de Los Andes. ISBN 978-980-11-1939-5.
  32. ^ Southern, Richard (1952) The Making of the Middle Ages.
  33. ^ Wolf, Eric R. (1965). Peasants. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0136554561.
  34. ^ Van der Ploeg, Jan Douwe (2012). The new peasantries: struggles for autonomy and sustainability in an era of empire and globalization. Routledge.
  35. ^ Moore, Barrington (1993). Social origins of dictatorship and democracy: Lord and peasant in the making of the modern world. Vol. 268. Beacon Press.
  36. ^ Shanin, Teodor (1973). "The nature and logic of the peasant economy 1: A Generalisation". The Journal of Peasant Studies. 1: 63–80. doi:10.1080/03066157308437872.
  37. ^ Alves, Leonardo Marcondes (2018). Give us this day our daily bread: The moral order of Pentecostal peasants in South Brazil. Master's thesis in Cultural Anthropology. Uppsala universitet.
  38. ^ Wolf, Eric R. (1969) Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century. New York: Harper & Row.
  39. ^ Cohen, Myron (1993). "Cultural and Political Inventions in Modern China: The Case of the Chinese "Peasant"". Daedalus. 122 (2): 151–170. JSTOR 20027171.

Cited sources

  • Cohen, Myron L. (2005). Kinship, Contract, Community, and State Anthropological Perspectives on China. Basel/Berlin/Boston: Stanford University Press. doi:10.1515/9781503624986. ISBN 978-1-5036-2498-6. S2CID 246207129.

Bibliography

  • Bix, Herbert P. Peasant Protest in Japan, 1590–1884 (1986)[ISBN missing]
  • Evans, Richard J., and W. R. Lee, eds. The German Peasantry: Conflict and Community from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Centuries (1986)[ISBN missing]
  • Figes, Orlando. "The Peasantry" in Vladimir IUrevich Cherniaev, ed. (1997). Critical Companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914–1921. Indiana UP. pp. 543–53. ISBN 0253333334.
  • Hobsbawm, E. J. "Peasants and politics," Journal of Peasant Studies, Volume 1, Issue 1 October 1973, pp. 3–22 – article discusses the definition of "peasant" as used in social sciences
  • Macey, David A. J. Government and Peasant in Russia, 1861–1906; The Pre-History of the Stolypin Reforms (1987).[ISBN missing]
  • Kingston-Mann, Esther and Timothy Mixter, eds. Peasant Economy, Culture, and Politics of European Russia, 1800–1921 (1991)[ISBN missing]
  • Thomas, William I., and Florian Znaniecki. The Polish Peasant in Europe and America (2 vol. 1918); classic sociological study; complete text online free
  • Wharton, Clifton R. Subsistence agriculture and economic development. Chicago: Aldine Pub. Co., 1969.[ISBN missing]
  • Wolf, Eric R. Peasants (Prentice-Hall, 1966).[ISBN missing]

Recent

  • Akram-Lodhi, A. Haroon, and Cristobal Kay, eds. Peasants and Globalization: Political Economy, Rural Transformation and the Agrarian Question (2009)[ISBN missing]
  • Barkin, David. "Who Are The Peasants?" Latin American Research Review, 2004, Vol. 39 Issue 3, pp. 270–281
  • Brass, Tom. Peasants, Populism and Postmodernism (2000)[ISBN missing]
  • Brass, Tom, ed. Latin American Peasants (2003)[ISBN missing]
  • Scott, James C. The Moral Economy of the Peasant: Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia (1976)[ISBN missing]

External links

peasant, other, uses, disambiguation, look, peasant, wiktionary, free, dictionary, peasant, industrial, agricultural, laborer, farmer, with, limited, land, ownership, especially, living, middle, ages, under, feudalism, paying, rent, fees, services, landlord, e. For other uses see Peasant disambiguation Look up peasant in Wiktionary the free dictionary A peasant is a pre industrial agricultural laborer or a farmer with limited land ownership especially one living in the Middle Ages under feudalism and paying rent tax fees or services to a landlord 1 2 In Europe three classes of peasants existed non free slaves semi free Serfdom serfs and free tenants Peasants might hold title to land outright fee simple or by any of several forms of land tenure among them socage quit rent leasehold and copyhold 3 Young women offer berries to visitors to their izba home 1909 Those who had been serfs among the Russian peasantry were officially emancipated in 1861 Photograph by Sergey Prokudin Gorsky In some contexts peasant has a pejorative meaning even when referring to farm laborers 4 As early as in 13th century Germany the concept of peasant could imply rustic as well as robber as the English term villain 5 villein 6 7 In 21st century English the word peasant can mean an ignorant rude or unsophisticated person 8 The word rose to renewed popularity in the 1940s 1960s 9 as a collective term often referring to rural populations of developing countries in general as the semantic successor to native incorporating all its condescending and racial overtones 4 The word peasantry is commonly used in a non pejorative sense as a collective noun for the rural population in the poor and developing countries of the world citation needed Via Campesina an organization claiming to represent the rights of about 200 million farm workers around the world self defines as an International Peasant s Movement as of 2019 update 10 The United Nations and its Human Rights Council prominently uses the term peasant in a non pejorative sense as in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas adopted in 2018 In general English language literature the use of the word peasant has steadily declined since about 1970 11 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Social position 3 Medieval European peasants 4 Early modern Germany 5 France 6 Chinese farmers 7 Latin American farmers 8 Historiography 9 See also 9 1 Related terms 10 References 11 Cited sources 12 Bibliography 12 1 Recent 13 External linksEtymology A farm in 1794 The word peasant is derived from the 15th century French word paisant meaning one from the pays or countryside ultimately from the Latin pagus or outlying administrative district 12 Social position Finnish Savonian farmers at a cottage in early 19th century by Pehr Hillestrom and J F Martin Peasants typically made up the majority of the agricultural labour force in a pre industrial society The majority of the people according to one estimate 85 of the population in the Middle Ages were peasants 13 Though peasant is a word of loose application once a market economy had taken root the term peasant proprietors was frequently used to describe the traditional rural population in countries where smallholders farmed much of the land More generally the word peasant is sometimes used to refer pejoratively to those considered to be lower class perhaps defined by poorer education and or a lower income citation needed Medieval European peasantsThe open field system of agriculture dominated most of Europe during medieval times and endured until the nineteenth century in many areas Under this system peasants lived on a manor presided over by a lord or a bishop of the church Peasants paid rent or labor services to the lord in exchange for their right to cultivate the land Fallowed land pastures forests and wasteland were held in common The open field system required cooperation among the peasants of the manor 14 It was gradually replaced by individual ownership and management of land The relative position of peasants in Western Europe improved greatly after the Black Death had reduced the population of medieval Europe in the mid 14th century resulting in more land for the survivors and making labor more scarce In the wake of this disruption to the established order it became more productive for many laborers to demand wages and other alternative forms of compensation which ultimately led to the development of widespread literacy and the enormous social and intellectual changes of the Enlightenment The evolution of ideas in an environment of relatively widespread literacy laid the groundwork for the Industrial Revolution which enabled mechanically and chemically augmented agricultural production while simultaneously increasing the demand for factory workers in cities who became what Karl Marx called the proletariat The trend toward individual ownership of land typified in England by Enclosure displaced many peasants from the land and compelled them often unwillingly to become urban factory workers who came to occupy the socio economic stratum formerly the preserve of the medieval peasants This process happened in an especially pronounced and truncated way in Eastern Europe Lacking any catalysts for change in the 14th century Eastern European peasants largely continued upon the original medieval path until the 18th and 19th centuries Serfdom was abolished in Russia in 1861 and while many peasants would remain in areas where their family had farmed for generations the changes did allow for the buying and selling of lands traditionally held by peasants and for landless ex peasants to move to the cities 15 Even before emancipation in 1861 serfdom was on the wane in Russia The proportion of serfs within the empire had gradually decreased from 45 50 percent at the end of the eighteenth century to 37 7 percent in 1858 16 Early modern Germany Feiernde Bauern Celebrating Peasants artist unknown 18th or 19th century In Germany peasants continued to center their lives in the village well into the 19th century They belonged to a corporate body and helped to manage the community resources and to monitor community life 17 In the East they had the status of serfs bound permanently to parcels of land A peasant is called a Bauer in German and Bur in Low German pronounced in English like boor 18 In most of Germany farming was handled by tenant farmers who paid rents and obligatory services to the landlord typically a nobleman 19 Peasant leaders supervised the fields and ditches and grazing rights maintained public order and morals and supported a village court which handled minor offenses Inside the family the patriarch made all the decisions and tried to arrange advantageous marriages for his children Much of the villages communal life centered on church services and holy days In Prussia the peasants drew lots to choose conscripts required by the army The noblemen handled external relationships and politics for the villages under their control and were not typically involved in daily activities or decisions 20 FranceMain article French peasants Information about the complexities of the French Revolution especially the fast changing scene in Paris reached isolated areas through both official announcements and long established oral networks Peasants responded differently to different sources of information The limits on political knowledge in these areas depended more on how much peasants chose to know than on bad roads or illiteracy Historian Jill Maciak concludes that peasants were neither subservient reactionary nor ignorant 21 In his seminal book Peasants into Frenchmen the Modernization of Rural France 1880 1914 1976 historian Eugen Weber traced the modernization of French villages and argued that rural France went from backward and isolated to modern and possessing a sense of French nationhood during the late 19th and early 20th centuries 22 He emphasized the roles of railroads republican schools and universal military conscription He based his findings on school records migration patterns military service documents and economic trends Weber argued that until 1900 or so a sense of French nationhood was weak in the provinces Weber then looked at how the policies of the Third Republic created a sense of French nationality in rural areas 23 The book was widely praised but some 24 argued that a sense of Frenchness existed in the provinces before 1870 Chinese farmersSee also Agriculture in China Farmers in China have been sometimes referred to as peasants in English language sources However the traditional term for farmer nongfu 农夫 simply refers to farmer or agricultural worker In the 19th century Japanese intellectuals reinvented the Chinese terms fengjian 封建 for feudalism and nongmin 农民 or farming people terms used in the description of feudal Japanese society 25 These terms created a negative image of Chinese farmers by making a class distinction where one had not previously existed 25 Anthropologist Myron Cohen considers these terms to be neologisms that represented a cultural and political invention He writes 26 This divide represented a radical departure from tradition F W Mote and others have shown how especially during the later imperial era Ming and Qing dynasties China was notable for the cultural social political and economic interpenetration of city and countryside But the term nongmin did enter China in association with Marxist and non Marxist Western perceptions of the peasant thereby putting the full weight of the Western heritage to use in a new and sometimes harshly negative representation of China s rural population Likewise with this development Westerners found it all the more natural to apply their own historically derived images of the peasant to what they observed or were told in China The idea of the peasant remains powerfully entrenched in the Western perception of China to this very day Modern Western writers often continue to use the term peasant for Chinese farmers typically without ever defining what the term means 27 This Western use of the term suggests that China is stagnant medieval underdeveloped and held back by its rural population 28 Cohen writes that the imposition of the historically burdened Western contrasts of town and country shopkeeper and peasant or merchant and landlord serves only to distort the realities of the Chinese economic tradition 29 Latin American farmersIn Latin America the term peasant is translated to Campesino from campo country person but the meaning has changed over time While most Campesinos before the 20th century were in equivalent status to peasants they usually did not own land and had to make payments to or were in an employment position towards a landlord the hacienda system most Latin American countries saw one or more extensive land reforms in the 20th century The land reforms of Latin America were more comprehensive initiatives 30 that redistributed lands from large landholders to former peasants 31 farm workers and tenant farmers Hence many Campesinos in Latin America today are closer smallholders who own their land and don t pay rent to a landlord rather than peasants who don t own land HistoriographySee also Agrarianism Portrait sculpture of 18th century French peasants by artist George S Stuart in the permanent collection of the Museum of Ventura County Ventura California In medieval Europe society was theorized as being organized into three estates those who work those who pray and those who fight 32 The Annales School of 20th century French historians emphasized the importance of peasants Its leader Fernand Braudel devoted the first volume called The Structures of Everyday Life of his major work Civilization and Capitalism 15th 18th Century to the largely silent and invisible world that existed below the market economy Other research in the field of peasant studies was promoted by Florian Znaniecki and Fei Xiaotong and in the post 1945 studies of the great tradition and the little tradition in the work of Robert Redfield In the 1960s anthropologists and historians began to rethink the role of peasant revolt in world history and in their own disciplines Peasant revolution was seen as a Third World response to capitalism and imperialism 33 The anthropologist Eric Wolf for instance drew on the work of earlier scholars in the Marxist tradition such as Daniel Thorner who saw the rural population as a key element in the transition from feudalism to capitalism Wolf and a group of scholars 34 35 36 37 criticized both Marx and the field of Modernization theorists for treating peasants as lacking the ability to take action 38 James C Scott s field observations in Malaysia convinced him that villagers were active participants in their local politics even though they were forced to use indirect methods Many of these activist scholars looked back to the peasant movement in India and to the theories of the revolution in China led by Mao Zedong starting in the 1920s The anthropologist Myron Cohen however asked why the rural population in China were called peasants rather than farmers a distinction he called political rather than scientific 39 One important outlet for their scholarly work and theory was The Journal of Peasant Studies See also The Peasant Wedding by Flemish painter Pieter Brueghel the Elder 1567 or 1568 Peasants in a Tavern by Adriaen van Ostade c 1635 at the Alte Pinakothek Munich Monument dedicated to Serbian peasant Jagodina Agrarianism Cudgel War Family economy Feudalism Folk culture Land reform Land reform by country List of peasant revolts Peasant economics Peasant Party political movements in various countries Peasants Republic Peasants Revolt Petty nobility Popular revolt in late medieval Europe Serfdom Via CampesinaRelated terms Aloer Boor Bracciante Campesino Churl Contadino Cotter Fellah Free tenant Honbyakushō Kulak Muzhik Pagesos de remenca Pawn Peon Serf Sharecropper Smerd Șerb ro Tenant farmer Terrone VilleinReferences peasant Wiktionary peasant Merriam Webster online Webster Hutton 2004 Early European History Kessinger Publishing p 440 ISBN 978 1 4191 1711 4 Retrieved 3 June 2012 a b Hill Polly 1982 Dry Grain Farming Families Hausaland Nigeria and Karnataka India Compared Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521271028 villain Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required villein Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Edelman Marc 2013 What is a peasant What are peasantries A briefing paper on issues of definition PDF United Nations Human Rights Retrieved 11 September 2019 Very early on both the English peasant the French paysan and similar terms sometimes connoted rustic ignorant stupid crass and rude among many other pejorative terms The word could also imply criminality as in thirteenth century Germany where peasant meant villain rustic devil robber brigand and looter peasant Definition of peasant in English by Lexico Dictionaries Lexico Dictionaries English Archived from the original on 12 July 2019 Retrieved 12 July 2019 1 A poor farmer of low social status who owns or rents a small piece of land for cultivation chiefly in historical use or with reference to subsistence farming in poorer countries 1 1 informal derogatory An ignorant rude or unsophisticated person a person of low social status Google Ngram Viewer books google com Retrieved 12 July 2019 Via Campesina Globalizing hope globalizing the struggle Via Campesina English Retrieved 12 July 2019 Google Ngram Viewer books google com Retrieved 12 July 2019 Webster s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary Merriam Webster pp 846 866 ISBN 978 0877795094 Alixe Bovey 30 April 2015 Peasants and their role in rural life The British Library British Library Retrieved 4 July 2020 Gies Frances and Gies Joseph 1989 Life in a Medieval Village New York Harper pp 12 18 ISBN 978 0060920463 Moon David 2001 The abolition of serfdom in Russia 1762 1907 Routledge pp 98 114 ISBN 9780582294868 Pipes Richard 1995 1974 Russia Under the Old Regime Second edition p 163 ISBN 978 0140247688 Sagarra Eda 1977 A Social History of Germany 1648 1914 Methuen young books pp 140 154 ISBN 978 0416776201 Wedgwood Hensleigh 1855 English Etymologies Transactions of the Philological Society 8 117 118 The monasteries of Bavaria which controlled 56 of the land were broken up by the government and sold off around 1803 Nipperdey Thomas 1996 Germany from Napoleon to Bismarck 1800 1866 Princeton Univ Press p 59 ISBN 978 0691636115 For details on the life of a representative peasant farmer who migrated in 1710 to Pennsylvania see Bernd Kratz he was a farmer Hans Stauffer A Farmer in Germany before his Emigration to Pennsylvania Genealogist Fall 2008 Vol 22 Issue 2 pp 131 169 Maciak Jill 2001 Of News and Networks The Communication of Political Information in the Rural South West during the French Revolution French History 15 3 273 306 doi 10 1093 fh 15 3 273 Amato Joseph A 1992 Eugen Weber s France Journal of Social History 25 4 879 882 doi 10 1353 jsh 25 4 879 JSTOR 3788392 Weber Eugen 1980 The Second Republic Politics and the Peasant French Historical Studies 11 4 521 550 doi 10 2307 286349 JSTOR 286349 Margadant Ted W 1979 French Rural Society in the Nineteenth Century A Review Essay Agricultural History 53 3 644 651 a b Cohen p 64 Cohen p 65 Cohen p 68 Mei Yi tsi 1998 Ideology Power Text Self Representation and the Peasant Other in Modern Chinese Literature Stanford University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0804733199 Cohen p 73 The Agrarian Reform Law PDF Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 26 July 2022 Delahaye Oliver 2018 La Cuestion Agraria en Venezuela PDF in Spanish Universidad de Los Andes ISBN 978 980 11 1939 5 Southern Richard 1952 The Making of the Middle Ages Wolf Eric R 1965 Peasants Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0136554561 Van der Ploeg Jan Douwe 2012 The new peasantries struggles for autonomy and sustainability in an era of empire and globalization Routledge Moore Barrington 1993 Social origins of dictatorship and democracy Lord and peasant in the making of the modern world Vol 268 Beacon Press Shanin Teodor 1973 The nature and logic of the peasant economy 1 A Generalisation The Journal of Peasant Studies 1 63 80 doi 10 1080 03066157308437872 Alves Leonardo Marcondes 2018 Give us this day our daily bread The moral order of Pentecostal peasants in South Brazil Master s thesis in Cultural Anthropology Uppsala universitet Wolf Eric R 1969 Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century New York Harper amp Row Cohen Myron 1993 Cultural and Political Inventions in Modern China The Case of the Chinese Peasant Daedalus 122 2 151 170 JSTOR 20027171 Cited sourcesCohen Myron L 2005 Kinship Contract Community and State Anthropological Perspectives on China Basel Berlin Boston Stanford University Press doi 10 1515 9781503624986 ISBN 978 1 5036 2498 6 S2CID 246207129 BibliographyBix Herbert P Peasant Protest in Japan 1590 1884 1986 ISBN missing Evans Richard J and W R Lee eds The German Peasantry Conflict and Community from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Centuries 1986 ISBN missing Figes Orlando The Peasantry in Vladimir IUrevich Cherniaev ed 1997 Critical Companion to the Russian Revolution 1914 1921 Indiana UP pp 543 53 ISBN 0253333334 Hobsbawm E J Peasants and politics Journal of Peasant Studies Volume 1 Issue 1 October 1973 pp 3 22 article discusses the definition of peasant as used in social sciences Macey David A J Government and Peasant in Russia 1861 1906 The Pre History of the Stolypin Reforms 1987 ISBN missing Kingston Mann Esther and Timothy Mixter eds Peasant Economy Culture and Politics of European Russia 1800 1921 1991 ISBN missing Thomas William I and Florian Znaniecki The Polish Peasant in Europe and America 2 vol 1918 classic sociological study complete text online free Wharton Clifton R Subsistence agriculture and economic development Chicago Aldine Pub Co 1969 ISBN missing Wolf Eric R Peasants Prentice Hall 1966 ISBN missing Recent Akram Lodhi A Haroon and Cristobal Kay eds Peasants and Globalization Political Economy Rural Transformation and the Agrarian Question 2009 ISBN missing Barkin David Who Are The Peasants Latin American Research Review 2004 Vol 39 Issue 3 pp 270 281 Brass Tom Peasants Populism and Postmodernism 2000 ISBN missing Brass Tom ed Latin American Peasants 2003 ISBN missing Scott James C The Moral Economy of the Peasant Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia 1976 ISBN missing External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peasants Wikiquote has quotations related to Peasant Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peasant amp oldid 1153196979, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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