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Paperback Peasants of Languedoc Book

ISBN: 0252006356

ISBN13: 9780252006357

Peasants of Languedoc

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Hailed as a pioneering work of "total history" when it was published in France in 1966, Le Roy Ladurie's volume combines elements of human geography, historical demography, economic history, and folk culture in a broad depiction of a great agrarian cycle, lasting from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment. It describes the conflicts and contradictions of a traditional peasant society in which the rise in population was not matched by increases in wealth...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A tour de force of an interdisciplinary approach to history

In Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie's The Peasants of Languedoc the message and the [historical] method are inseparable. The sources used to explore rural life in the French province of Languedoc (today Languedoc-Roussillon), at times, take a more prominent role in the narrative than the peasant workers and tenant farmers. Its central theme examines the "Malthusian dilemma of a traditional agrarian society incapable, over the long run, of preserving a balance between population and food production." (x) Le Roy Ladurie employs a mélange of economic, demographic, social, meteorological, political, religious, psychological analysis to present in a histoire totale that the fluctuations within the agrarian cycle cannot be explained by only focusing on economic determinants. Societal and weather-related factors influenced economic choices, and the economy shaped demographic and religious arrangements. Though Le Roy Ladurie primarily focuses his study on the agrarian cycle of Languedoc's economy stretching from 1500 to 1750, he, nevertheless, presents a load of comparative evidence from the fifteenth and prior centuries, and he is not shy about interpreting early modern decisions through twentieth century psychological principles. He divides the cycle into four phases: liftoff, rise, maturity, and decline. During the late medieval period, Languedoc's population suffered from famine and dearth, poor harvests, undernourishment, all of which made the onset of the Black Death of 1348 even more devastating. The late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries experienced expansion. Harvests rebounded, proper nutrition increased population, precious metal boosted monetary circulation, and urban areas grew. Sixteenth-century agricultural production, however, did not keep pace with population growth. The conditions set in motion, what Le Roy Ladurie termed, pauperization, which entailed reduced real wages and confining more people to smaller plots of land. At the beginning of the seventeenth century, an increase in land rents, higher taxes to the state, and a reinvigorated Catholic Church effort to collect the tithe "ate into the agricultural producer's income." (p. 215) The gross product also rose during this period, just not enough to keep pace with population and rent increases. A long period of recession marked the latter part of the century. Aggregate agriculture declined, taxation continued upward, and the population, for the first time in two centuries, began to decline because of joblessness, undernourishment, epidemics, and emigration. The beginning of the eighteenth century witnessed an economic resurgence in Languedoc, featuring increased wine production, diversified crops, a stable population growth, and declining mortality rates. In this environment, despite the continuance of land subdivision, pauperization vanished. The rise in earnings per hectare increased farmers' income and spread the earnings among more tenants. The eighteenth-century

Another brilliant title

For students of French or European history this book by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie is a must read! This author is truly the most brilliant French historian. I recommend anything by Ladurie without reservation.

Ian Myles Slater on: Economic and Social History

Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, the author of "The Peasants of Languedoc," is a French historian whose works have had considerable exposure in English. The fascinating "Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error" (and alternate titles; 1975, translation 1978) may be the best-known of his works, as well as the most controversial among historians, based as it is on village gossip recorded by Inquisitors. Perhaps more representative are detailed studies of a popular demonstration / riot in "Carnival in Romans" ("Le Carnaval de Romans," 1979), and of folktale themes as transmitted in popular and literary versions from the south of France, in "Love, Death and Money in the Pays D'Oc" ("L'argent, l'amour et la mort en pays d'Oc," 1980), in which social stresses and personal anxieties come together. Underlying much of this production, however, and perhaps giving Ladurie the confidence to interpret the notoriously difficult inquisitorial records, is this less-inspiring sounding early work, "Les Paysans de Languedoc" of 1966, here translated under an equally plain and literal title, which appeared in English only three years after the original French edition. In any case, it clearly underlies his later investigations of provincial culture and society. This is a sophisticated analysis of primarily economic records from one of the traditional provinces of southern France, covering mainly the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. It deals with the basics of ordinary life -- production, consumption, property, and taxes, and how they interacted. There are interesting confirmations of what can go wrong when people act without much guidance from economic theory in determining self-interest. For example, wide-spread cutting of wages in a time of rising prices reduced income and purchases, ultimately putting meat beyond the reach of most consumers. This was a catastrophe for some of the same employers, who were cattle-raisers (or owners of grazing land) with a diminishing market. (If I understand Ladurie's tables and charts correctly -- and this involves some interpretation on the part of a non-professional -- the typical response to their falling profits was to cut wages again, again reducing the cash in circulation, and reinforcing the cycle in a time when markets for most goods, especially perishable ones, were strictly local.) It is definitely not light reading, but Ladurie is not above adding characterizations (such as "tight-fisted fellows") to otherwise anonymous groups of property-owners and employers, sacrificing a little of the appearance of objectivity for the sake of human interest. Generally speaking, Ladurie draws such positions from the hard data, and the attentive reader may well reach the same conclusion; I remain happier about the practice from a literary point of view than an historical one. "Peasants of Languedoc" represents a major move toward understanding the history of people left out of official histories, although the original descri
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