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Library Peasants Make Their Own History, But Not Just as They Please

Peasants Make Their Own History, But Not Just as They Please

Peasants Make Their Own History, But Not Just as They Please

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2008
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201300888853
Pages
205-228

This essay employs contemporary peasant mobilizing discourses and practices to evaluate the terms in which we understand agrarian movements today, through an exercise of historical specification. First, it considers why the terms of the original agrarian question no longer apply to agrarian change today. The shift in the terms corresponds to the movement from the late-nineteenth century and twentieth century, when states were the organizing principle of political-economy, to the twenty-first century, when capital has become the organizing principle. Second, and related, agrarian mobilizations are viewed here as barometers of contemporary political-economic relations. In politicizing the socio-ecological crisis of neoliberalism, they problematize extant categories of political and sociological analysis, re-centring agriculture and food as key to democratic and sustainable relations of social production.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

MCMICHAEL, PHILIP

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