The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-industrial EuropeTrevor Henry Aston, C. H. E. Philpin Cambridge University Press, 30 de mar. de 1987 - 339 páginas Few historical issues have occasioned such discussion since at least the time of Marx as the transition from feudalism to capitalism in Western Europe. The Brenner Debate, which reprints from Past and Present various article in 1976, is a scholarly presentation of a variety of points of view, covering a very wide range in time, place and type of approach. Weighty theoretical responses to Brenner's first formulation followed from the late Sir Michael Postan, John Hatcher, Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie and Guy Bois; more particular contributions came from Patricia Croot, David Parker, Arnost Klìma and Heide Wunder on England, France, Bohemia and Germany; and reflective pieces from R. H. Hilton and the late J. P. Cooper. Completing the volume, and giving it an overall coherence, are Brenner's own comprehensive response to those who had taken part in the debate, and also R. H. Hilton's introduction that aims to bring together the major themes in the collection of essays. The debate has already aroused widespread interest among historians and scholars in allied fields as well as among ordinary readers, and may reasonably be regarded as one of the most important historical debates of prevailing years. |
Conteúdo
Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in PreIndustrial Europe | 10 |
Population and Class Relations in Feudal Society | 64 |
Agrarian Class Structure and the Development of Capitalism France and England Compared | 79 |
Peasant Organization and Class Conflict in Eastern and Western Germany | 91 |
A Reply to Robert Brenner | 101 |
Against the NeoMalthusian Orthodoxy | 107 |
A Crisis of Feudalism | 119 |
In Search of Agrarian Capitalism | 138 |
Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in PreIndustrial Bohemia | 192 |
The Agrarian Roots of European Capitalism | 213 |
329 | |
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Termos e frases comuns
acres arable areas ation Avrainville Bohemia Bois Brenner Cambridge capital capitalist cent class relations class structure Crise du féodalisme Crise rurale crisis demesnes demographic divergent evolutions early modern period east eastern Econ economic development eighteenth century England English especially estates European evolution extra-economic farmers fifteenth forces Fourquin fourteenth France freeholders French Germany grain hectares Hist historians holdings Ile-de-France improvement income increase industrial investment Jacquart labour services land landlords Languedoc late medieval later leases levies London long-term lords lordship M. M. Postan Malthusian manorial ment métayage neo-Malthusian Origins of Prussia peasantry Picardie political population Postan Postan and Hatcher Prussian R. H. Hilton région relationship relatively rents result rise Roy Ladurie rurale en Ile-de-France seigneurial serfdom serfs seventeenth century siècle sixteenth century social Society subsistence surplus extraction tallages teenth century tenure Thirsk thirteenth century trends tury village villein wage wage labour western Europe
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Página 7 - Social relations are closely bound up with productive forces. In acquiring new productive forces men change their mode of production; and in changing their mode of production, in changing the way of earning their living, they change all their social relations. The hand-mill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill, society with the industrial capitalist.