Reconceptualizing The Peasantry: Anthropology In Global Perspective
In: Critical Essays in Anthropology
Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Preface -- Introduction -- The Death of Dualism -- The Context of This Book -- Notes -- Chapter 1. San Jerónimo: A Peasant Community? -- Lencho Martínez, a Peasant Man? -- Rufina Vásquez, a Peasant Woman? -- Eliseo and Lucrecia Mendoza, Peasant Youth? -- Notes -- Chapter 2. Kinds of Others in the History of Anthropology -- Formative Anthropology and the Primitive -- Classical Anthropology and the Primitive -- Modern Anthropology and the Invention of the Peasant -- Global Anthropology: From Cold War to Peasant Wars -- Notes -- Chapter 3. Peasants and the Antinomies of the Modern Nation-State -- The Deep Structure of the Modern Nation-State and Its Anthropology -- Right-Wing Modernism -- Left-Wing Modernism -- Right and Left Modernization of the Peasantry Reconsidered -- Problems with Peasant Essentialism -- Beyond Stated Definitions -- Notes -- Chapter 4. Romantic Reactions to Modernist Peasant Studies -- Right-Wing Romanticism -- Left-Wing Romanticism -- From Dependency to Articulation -- From Articulation to Disarticulated Economies -- The Legacy of Romantic Reactions -- Sustainability or Stagnation? -- Beyond Dualist Theory -- Notes -- Chapter 5. Beyond Peasant Studies: Changing Social Fields of Identity and Theory -- Postdevelopment -- From Articulation to Networks to Reticula -- Globalization and Differentiation -- From Modern Structures to Global Complexity -- Notes -- Chapter 6. Differentiation and Identity -- From Individual to Person -- Internal Versus External Differentiation -- Decline of Class Identity and Increase in Class Difference -- Value, Differentiation, Community, and Autonomy -- Notes -- Chapter 7. From Modes of Production to Consumption of Modes: Class, Value, Power, and Resistance -- Class -- Resistance -- Value -- Value- Power and Class