Still an Awkward Class: Central European post-peasants at home and abroad in the era of neoliberalism Cover Image

Still an Awkward Class: Central European post-peasants at home and abroad in the era of neoliberalism
Still an Awkward Class: Central European post-peasants at home and abroad in the era of neoliberalism

Author(s): Chris Hann
Subject(s): Social Sciences
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: peasants; anthropology; households; globalization; agribusiness; migration; reproduction

Summary/Abstract: The paper builds on the author’s intimate knowledge of Eastern European village life over four decades. Before, during, and after socialism, villagers (“peasants” ) have always been incorporated into wider structures, while at the same time challenging standard social science theories. Their greater ability to reproduce themselves “outside the market” is the basis of their distinctiveness; this corresponds to a persisting distinction between town and countryside and has implications for political mobilization. The paper develops binary comparisons at two levels: first, between capitalist and socialist paths of rural development; second, within the latter, between the productive symbiosis accomplished in socialist Hungary and the stagnation of non-collectivized Poland. Some of these latter contrasts have persisted in new forms in the era of EU membership. Finally, the author expresses some personal nostalgia for the days when rural community studies constituted the bedrock of ethnographic writing about this region.

  • Issue Year: 2013
  • Issue No: 09
  • Page Range: 177-198
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: English