The Field and the Forge Quotes
The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
by
John Landers11 ratings, 4.55 average rating, 1 review
Open Preview
The Field and the Forge Quotes
Showing 1-4 of 4
“The West European marriage pattern, which combined delayed female marriage with substantial proportions remaining permanently single, seems to have been unique before the twentieth century and reduced birth rates below the levels prevailing elsewhere.”
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
“Characteristically contested and ambiguous, frontiers were zones of shifting alliance and unstable identity. Just as the spatial frontier was terra nullius to an imperial power and fit only for colonization, so the time frontier was a zone of worthless indolence in the eyes of moral reformer and capitalist alike. But to its inhabitants it was one in which economic activity yielded to an intensity of social life, of informal gatherings that reworked the multitude of networks and alliances on which life in small-scale communities depended.”
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
“For cultivators and artisans the northern world was a smaller place in winter, and became intractably large for rulers, merchants, and anyone else whose business concerned the disposition of resources in space.”
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
“Low productivity meant that most people could afford only the means of subsistence, and the resulting conditions of mass poverty further limited the expansion of production through a failure of demand. Low productivity restricted the division of labour because a large majority of the workforce was needed to produce food for the minority of non-food producers. This restriction impeded social differentiation in general, and the development and transmission of society's 'stock of knowledge' was rarely the province of specialized institutions. Technical knowledge in particular was transmitted orally, through informal networks often based on kinship or affinity, and various institutionalized forms of 'learning by doing. These modes of transmission favoured a conservative particularism in technology, which often associated the perpetuation of existing practices with respect for tradition in general and even with the maintenance of ethnic or other forms of collective identity.”
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
― The Field and the Forge: Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West
