Rural Inventions

Rural Inventions
Author :
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Total Pages : 189
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780190079093
ISBN-13 : 0190079096
Rating : 4/5 (096 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Rural Inventions by : Sarah Farmer

Download or read book Rural Inventions written by Sarah Farmer and published by Oxford University Press. This book was released on 2020-02-19 with total page 189 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: At the close of the twentieth century, even as globalization spurred the growth of megacities worldwide, inhabiting the French countryside had become an internationally-shared fantasy and practice. Accounts of moving into old farmhouses were bestsellers, and houses and barns built by peasants had been renovated as second homes throughout the rural hinterland. Such developments, Sarah Farmer argues, did not simply stem from nostalgia for a rural past or a desire to invest in real estate. Rather, they defined new versions of the rural that emerge in post-agrarian societies. In post-World War II France, cutting-edge technological modernization and explosive economic growth uprooted rural populations and eroded the village traditions of a largely peasant nation. And yet, this book argues, rural France did not vanish in the sweeping transformations of the 1950s and 1960s. The French responded to the collapse of peasant society and threats to cherished landscapes by devising new ways of inhabiting the countryside, making them the sites of change and adaptation. In addition to the rise of restored peasant houses as second residences, Rural Inventions explores the utopian experiments in rural communes and in “going back to the land”; environmentalism; the extraordinary success of peasant autobiographies; photography; and other representations through which the French revalorized rural life and landscapes. The peasantry as a social class may have died out, but the countryside persisted, valued as a site not only for agriculture but increasingly for sport and leisure, tourism, social and political engagement, and a natural environment worth protecting. The postwar French state and the nation's rural and urban inhabitants, Sarah Farmer eloquently shows, remade the French countryside in relation to the city and to the world at large, not only invoking traditional France but also creating a vibrant and evolving part of the France yet to come.


Rural Inventions Related Books

Bringing the Empire Back Home
Language: en
Pages: 249
Authors: Herman Lebovics
Categories: Social Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2004-06-23 - Publisher: Duke University Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Thirty years ago, an international antiglobalization movement was born in the grazing lands of France’s Larzac plateau. In the 1970s, Larzac farmers were join
Bringing the Empire Home
Language: en
Pages: 233
Authors: Zine Magubane
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2004 - Publisher: University of Chicago Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

How did South Africans become black? How did the idea of blackness influence conceptions of disadvantaged groups in England such as women and the poor, and vice
Rural Inventions
Language: en
Pages: 189
Authors: Sarah Farmer
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2020-02-19 - Publisher: Oxford University Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

At the close of the twentieth century, even as globalization spurred the growth of megacities worldwide, inhabiting the French countryside had become an interna
Anti-Imperial Metropolis
Language: en
Pages: 359
Authors: Michael Goebel
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2015-08-25 - Publisher: Cambridge University Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book traces the spread of a global anti-imperialism from the vantage point of Paris between the two World Wars, where countless future leaders of Third Wor
Mobilizing nature
Language: en
Pages: 351
Authors: Chris Pearson
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-10-03 - Publisher: Manchester University Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Mobilizing nature traces the environmental history of war and militarisation in France, from the creation of Châlons Camp in 1857 to military environmentalist