Remembering Peasants serves dual roles- as an historic analysis of the vanishing subsistence farmer and a memoir of an accomplished historian recognizing his personal links to this history, and his concerns for how history is now perceived.
The history- The peasant history focuses on Europe (including Ireland, Britain, France, Spain, Italy, broadly Poland), the foundation of communal support to address scarcity, and the decline in response to industrialization, emigration, and political change. The personal tales are balanced with startling statistics and a wide net of supporting scholarship. Not light reading but worth the effort.
The memoir- Patrick Joyce, now 78, reflects upon what he’s uncovered, and it’s rich. The son of Irish peasants transplanted to England, his experiences highlight what was lost and gained by his family’s transition. Joyce, in exploring museums aimed at peasant history, shares his reactions to what is being conveyed and his concerns about the contemporary history tourism.
Two points on the concept of time as noted by Joyce, suggest the impact of the loss of peasantry. 1. Peasant time is circular, dictated by the seasons. Industrialization- and the demise of peasant life- shifts to time as linear, less continuity. 2. The relationship of time as past/present/ future is altered. Peasants, in focusing on farming, had to balance their emphasis on all three. With increased technology and information bombardment, the present- and our effort to respond to it, leaves little time to acknowledge and learn from the past. And in attempting to cope with the present, we are less likely to view the future with the optimism of prior generations.