The Russian Peasantry, 1600-1930: The World the Peasants Made.The Russian Peasantry, 1600-1930: The World the Peasants Made. By David Moon David A. Moon is a programmer and computer scientist, known for his work on the Lisp programming language and related topics. Projects
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of : Addison Wesley Longman Ltd., 1999. xii plus 396pp.). This book originated in a lecture course Professor Moon gave at the University of Texas at Austin “University of Texas” redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System. The University of Texas at Austin (often referred to as The University of Texas, UT Austin, UT, or Texas in 1989. It is based largely on secondary sources and will be of most interest to students, particularly graduate students. The author focuses on the serf serf, under feudalism, peasant laborer who can be generally characterized as hereditarily attached to the manor in a state of semibondage, performing the servile duties of the lord (see also manorial system). system and primarily on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The discussion of twentieth century is perfunctory per·func·to·ry adj. 1. Done routinely and with little interest or care: The operator answered the phone with a perfunctory greeting. 2. Acting with indifference; showing little interest or care. . Thus the author discusses the census of 1897 but not that of 1926. The organization of the book is thematic rather than chronological, and the choice of topics shows the author's interest in social structures and demography demography (dĭmŏg`rəfē), science of human population. Demography represents a fundamental approach to the understanding of human society. rather than culture, economics, anthropology, or ethnography. The most interesting chapters concern population and households. The subject of "the Russian peasantry" is a bit of a conundrum conundrum A problem with no satisfactory solution; a dilemma , since this was a legal estate in pre-revolutionary Russia. As a result, although the author is chiefly concerned with rural agriculturalists, the data he uses also concern former peasants and people in the process of leaving farming. In this respect, he tends to overstate the separateness of the peasantry and its "otherness oth·er·ness n. The quality or condition of being other or different, especially if exotic or strange: "We're going to see in Europe ... ". Thus in describing the census takers of 1897, he writes, "When they crossed the thresholds of the peasant's house, however, the enumerators entered a different world" (p. 11). He may have been led astray by journalists of the period, who often stressed the peasant's exoticism ex·ot·i·cism n. The quality or condition of being exotic. exoticism the condition of being foreign, striking, or unusual in color and design. — exoticist, n. and backwardness. Although nobles might have gaped at the inside of peasant cottages, other census-takers were probably familiar with peasant life. The children of parish priests often grew up playing with peasant children, and primary schoolteachers were frequently the children of peasants, as were many estate stewards and clerks. In that respect, lat e nineteenth-century Russia was filled with former peasants, just as turn-of-the-century America was filled with former farmers. The strength of the book lies in the information that Moon presents about the demography of the peasant population and its social institutions, particularly the family and the peasant commune. The author points up the seeming anomaly that despite its poverty and exploitation, the peasant population of the Russian empire The subject of this article was previously also known as Russia. For other uses, see Russia (disambiguation) The Russian Empire (Pre-reform Russian: Pоссiйская Имперiя, Modern Russian: increased rapidly during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He attributes this phenomenon to the peasants' decision not to limit their birthrates and hence the failure of Russia to undergo a demographic transition Demographic transition occurs in societies that transition from high birth rates and high death rates to low birth rates and low death rates as part of the economic development of a country from a pre-industrial to an industrialized economy. . Arguing that peasants behaved rationally, Moon attributes their decision to marry early to economic, social, and institutional factors. He points out that the peasants' early marriage suited the interests of serf owners, heads of households, and families who faced the reality of high childhood mortality rates. Yet the increase in population can also be attributed to the availability of food, which was generally plentiful, as the late economic historian from the University of Chicago, Arcadius Kahan Arcadius Kahan (January 16, 1920-1982) was a noted 20th century economic historian and Professor at the University of Chicago. , long argued. The chapter on households is particularly interesting for the author's discussion of family size, which he shows varied considerably over time and space. The chapter on the peasant commune will prove helpful to students. In this respect the author does a good job in bringing together a wealth of recent research. The weakest features of the book are the treatments peasants' economic and cultural life. The economic life of the peasants is discussed variously in four separate but somewhat overlapping chapters (2,3,4,6), which cover the environment, exploitation, production, and consumption respectively. Thus peasant migration, which was primarily an economic decision, is discussed in the chapter on environment, whereas serfdom serfdom In medieval Europe, condition of a tenant farmer who was bound to a hereditary plot of land and to the will of his landlord. Serfs differed from slaves in that slaves could be bought and sold without reference to land, whereas serfs changed lords only when the land , which was an impetus for flight to border regions is treated in a chapter on exploitation. One issue that is lost in this approach is the low level of peasant productivity compared with that of western European agriculture. There is little on the beliefs and values of the peasants, whether expressed through religion, folklore, or popular culture. The discussion of peasant life has an old-fashioned anthropological tone to it. Hence the reader learns of peasant customs, but little about how they fit into the larger picture of peasant life. As a result, Moon makes the peasantry seem more religiousl y and ethnically homogeneous than they actually were. He might have corrected this impression by drawing on memoirs and ethnographic commentaries published in the so-called "thick journals" of the nineteenth century. The author's command of Russian sources is spotty. He was probably too late to use L. V. Milov, Velikorusskii pakhar' i osobennosti rossirskogo istoricheskogo protessa (Moscow, 1998) but he should have found the results of the international conference on peasants--Mentalitet i agrarnoe razvitie Rossii (XIX-XX vv.) Materialy mezhdunarodnoi konferentsii. Moskva 14-15 iiunia 1994 g. ed. V.P. Danilov, L. Milov, et al. (Moscow, 1996). The book contains a guide to further reading but no bibliography. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion