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The Culture of Collaboration: The resilience of the peasantry in San Pablo Coatlan, Oaxaca, Mexico.

机译:合作文化:墨西哥瓦哈卡州圣巴勃罗·科特兰的农民的韧性。

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摘要

Despite predictions they would disappear, peasants have been resilient. I argue that this resilience warrants renewed anthropological attention. In 2009, I conducted participant-observation research in a peasant community, San Pablo Coatlán, Oaxaca, Mexico. During my fieldwork the community was torn between a powerful minority who sought to bring "modernization" by reorganizing the political structure and privatizing the land and the majority who supported the traditional political structure and communal land. This political conflict provided an excellent opportunity to understand the resilience of the peasantry.;I define peasants as those who have the ability to practice subsistence farming, but do not have the ability to accumulate wealth. I argue that the resilience of the peasantry is largely a result of two factors: liminal livelihoods, and social capital. First, peasant livelihoods are liminal: they are at the edge of subsistence production, market production, and wage labor. Peasants are not an intermediate stage between "primitive" and "modern", their livelihoods are active strategies to combine available opportunities. Peasants' ability to practice subsistence farming provides a productive use for household labor. This ability is important even for those who are dedicated entirely to wage labor because the ability to return to subsistence farming is a form of insurance. The second factor which contributes to the resilience of the peasantry is social capital. Peasants can rely on the support of their fellow community members. In San Pablo, people use unpaid cooperative labor for farming and home construction. I show that much of the farming would not be possible if farmers had to hire workers when they needed additional hands. I explore the various motives to collaborate in private production and in public life. I argue that there are several instrumental motives to participate: direct rewards, reciprocity, and prestige. There are also several consummatory motives: enjoyment, value introjection, and bounded solidarity. I organize these motives into a framework to understand participation that connects the motives to material, structural, and ideological factors within the community. In the conclusion, I argue that this framework has applicability beyond peasant communities to better understand the motives to contribute to the common good.
机译:尽管有预言他们会消失,但农民们仍然坚韧不拔。我认为这种适应力值得人类学重新关注。 2009年,我在墨西哥瓦哈卡州San PabloCoatlán的一个农民社区进行了参与者观察研究。在我的野外工作期间,社区陷入了一个强大的少数群体的困境,他们通过重组政治结构和土地私有化来寻求实现“现代化”,而大多数人则支持传统的政治结构和公共土地。这种政治冲突为了解农民的抗灾能力提供了绝好的机会。我将农民定义为有能力从事自给农业但没有积累财富的农民。我认为农民的抵御能力在很大程度上是两个因素的结果:边缘生计和社会资本。首先,农民的生计是边缘性的:它们处于生计生产,市场生产和雇佣劳动的边缘。农民不是“原始”和“现代”之间的中间阶段,他们的生计是结合可用机会的积极策略。农民从事自给农业的能力为家庭劳动提供了生产性用途。即使对于那些完全致力于打工的人来说,这种能力也很重要,因为恢复生计农业的能力是一种保险。促进农民韧性的第二个因素是社会资本。农民可以依靠社区其他成员的支持。在圣巴勃罗,人们将无偿合作劳动用于农业和房屋建筑。我表明,如果农民在需要更多手的时候不得不雇用工人,那么大部分农业将无法实现。我探讨了在私人生产和公共生活中进行合作的各种动机。我认为参与的动机有多种:直接奖励,互惠和声望。还有一些消费动机:享受,价值注入和有限的团结。我将这些动机组织成一个框架,以理解将动机与社区内的物质,结构和意识形态因素联系起来的参与。最后,我认为,该框架在农民社区之外具有适用性,可以更好地理解为共同利益做出贡献的动机。

著录项

  • 作者

    Whittle, Matthew Day.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Santa Barbara.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Santa Barbara.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Cultural.;Latin American Studies.;Economics Agricultural.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 503 p.
  • 总页数 503
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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