Tiny Engines of Abundance: A History of Peasant Productivity and Repression

This book provides a historical and comparative perspective of peasant productivity using case studies portraying the extraordinary efficiency with which English cottagers, Jamaican ex-slaves, Guatemalan Mayan campesinos, Nigerian hill farmers and Kerala hut dwellers obtained bountiful and diversified harvests from small parcels of land, provisioning for their families and often local markets. These stories provide us with pictures of carefully limited needs, of sustainable livelihoods and of resilient self-reliance attacked relentlessly and mercilessly in the name of capital, progress, development, modernity and/or the state. For two hundred years we have been told that the hundreds of thousands, or millions, or billions of hungry mouths require that peasants be dispossessed to allow more industrious farmers to feed them. This book helps make it clear how wrong we have been. Handy’s approach is original, and the book will engage people interested in the history of the peasantry, rural development, and the quest for food sovereignty.

1140614826
Tiny Engines of Abundance: A History of Peasant Productivity and Repression

This book provides a historical and comparative perspective of peasant productivity using case studies portraying the extraordinary efficiency with which English cottagers, Jamaican ex-slaves, Guatemalan Mayan campesinos, Nigerian hill farmers and Kerala hut dwellers obtained bountiful and diversified harvests from small parcels of land, provisioning for their families and often local markets. These stories provide us with pictures of carefully limited needs, of sustainable livelihoods and of resilient self-reliance attacked relentlessly and mercilessly in the name of capital, progress, development, modernity and/or the state. For two hundred years we have been told that the hundreds of thousands, or millions, or billions of hungry mouths require that peasants be dispossessed to allow more industrious farmers to feed them. This book helps make it clear how wrong we have been. Handy’s approach is original, and the book will engage people interested in the history of the peasantry, rural development, and the quest for food sovereignty.

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Tiny Engines of Abundance: A History of Peasant Productivity and Repression

Tiny Engines of Abundance: A History of Peasant Productivity and Repression

by Jim Handy
Tiny Engines of Abundance: A History of Peasant Productivity and Repression

Tiny Engines of Abundance: A History of Peasant Productivity and Repression

by Jim Handy

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Overview

This book provides a historical and comparative perspective of peasant productivity using case studies portraying the extraordinary efficiency with which English cottagers, Jamaican ex-slaves, Guatemalan Mayan campesinos, Nigerian hill farmers and Kerala hut dwellers obtained bountiful and diversified harvests from small parcels of land, provisioning for their families and often local markets. These stories provide us with pictures of carefully limited needs, of sustainable livelihoods and of resilient self-reliance attacked relentlessly and mercilessly in the name of capital, progress, development, modernity and/or the state. For two hundred years we have been told that the hundreds of thousands, or millions, or billions of hungry mouths require that peasants be dispossessed to allow more industrious farmers to feed them. This book helps make it clear how wrong we have been. Handy’s approach is original, and the book will engage people interested in the history of the peasantry, rural development, and the quest for food sovereignty.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781773635439
Publisher: Fernwood Publishing
Publication date: 04/15/2022
Series: Critical Development Studies , #7
Sold by: De Marque
Format: eBook
Pages: 157
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Jim Handy is a professor of history at the University of Saskatchewan. He has written extensively on Guatemalan history and more generally on peasant economies, agrarian reform and political economy. He has been president of the Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, which awarded him a Distinguished Fellow recognition in 2015, particularly for his contribution to graduate student training. He has received numerous teaching awards and the J.W. George Ivany Internationalization Award by the University of Saskatchewan.

Table of Contents

Critical Development Studies Series ix

Series Editors xi

1 "Swept Away through Injustice" 1

2 "A Multiplication of Wretchedness" in England, 1750-1850 9

An Agricultural Revolution or Too Many People? 11

"A Robust and Flourishing Peasantry" 15

"The Occult Principle of the System" 21

"A Sweet Habit of the Blood" 25

3 Jamaican Peasants in Slavery, Semi-slavery and Freedom 31

Slave Gardens and Provision Grounds 32

"Land of Half Freedom" or "Saved from a Life of Savage Sloth" 36

"The Germ of a Noble Free Peasantry" 41

"Violence to their Nature": Pumpkin Patches and Repression 44

4 Guatemala: They Flattened Our Milpa 53

Milpa and Belonging 55

The Coffee Revolution 57

The Bells Ring in Chichicastenango 61

Peasants and the Revolution 64

The Liberation: Eating Cotton 68

"The Last Vestiges of Barbarity" 70

5 Nigerian Smallholders: Masters of the Environment 77

"A Vast, Uncivilised, and Unfed Population" 78

Imagining Unlimited Supplies of Labour 83

The Green Revolution: "The Chemical Genetic System" 88

"In the Wake of the Affluent Society" 90

"Inventive Self-Reliance" 95

6 Kerala: A Return to the Future 99

A Caste-Riven State 101

Land Reform 102

The Kerala Model? 104

A Model in Shambles 105

The Green Havoc 108

Hut-Dweller Gardens 114

Conclusion: "A Sweet Habit of the Blood" 121

Bibliography 125

Index 138

Acknowledgements 143

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