Fate, Honor, Family and Village

Demographic and Cultural Change in Rural Italy Since 1800

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Anthropology
Cover of the book Fate, Honor, Family and Village by Rudolph M. Bell, Taylor and Francis
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Rudolph M. Bell ISBN: 9781351520140
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Publication: September 4, 2017
Imprint: Routledge Language: English
Author: Rudolph M. Bell
ISBN: 9781351520140
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Publication: September 4, 2017
Imprint: Routledge
Language: English

The Italian peasantry has often been described as tragic, backward, hopeless, downtrodden, static, and passive. In Fate and Honor, Family and Village, Rudolph Bell argues against this characterization by reconstructing the complete demographic history of four country villages since 1800. He analyzes births, marriages, and deaths in terms of four concepts that capture more accurately and sympathetically the essence of the Italian peasant's life: Fortuna (fate), onore (honor, dignity), famiglia (family), and campanilismo (village).Fortuna is the cultural wellspring of Italian peasant society, the worldview from which all social life flows. The concept of Fortuna does not refer to philosophical questions, predestination, or value judgments. Rather, Fortuna is the sum total of all explanations of outcomes perceived to be beyond human control. Thus, in Bell's view, high mortality does not lead peasants to a resigned acceptance of their fate; instead, they rely on honor, reciprocal exchanges of favors, and marriage to forge new links in their familial and social networks. With thorough documentation in graphs and tables, the author evaluates peasant reactions to time, work, family, space, migration, and protest to portray rural Italians as active, flexible, and shrewd, participating fully in shaping their destinies.Bell asserts that the real problem of the Mezzogiorno is not one of resistance to technology, of high birth rates, or even of illiteracy. It is one of solving technical questions in ways that foster dependency. The historical and sociological practice of treating peasant culture as backward, secondary, and circumscribed only encourages disruption and ultimately blocks the road to economic and political justice in a post-modern world.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The Italian peasantry has often been described as tragic, backward, hopeless, downtrodden, static, and passive. In Fate and Honor, Family and Village, Rudolph Bell argues against this characterization by reconstructing the complete demographic history of four country villages since 1800. He analyzes births, marriages, and deaths in terms of four concepts that capture more accurately and sympathetically the essence of the Italian peasant's life: Fortuna (fate), onore (honor, dignity), famiglia (family), and campanilismo (village).Fortuna is the cultural wellspring of Italian peasant society, the worldview from which all social life flows. The concept of Fortuna does not refer to philosophical questions, predestination, or value judgments. Rather, Fortuna is the sum total of all explanations of outcomes perceived to be beyond human control. Thus, in Bell's view, high mortality does not lead peasants to a resigned acceptance of their fate; instead, they rely on honor, reciprocal exchanges of favors, and marriage to forge new links in their familial and social networks. With thorough documentation in graphs and tables, the author evaluates peasant reactions to time, work, family, space, migration, and protest to portray rural Italians as active, flexible, and shrewd, participating fully in shaping their destinies.Bell asserts that the real problem of the Mezzogiorno is not one of resistance to technology, of high birth rates, or even of illiteracy. It is one of solving technical questions in ways that foster dependency. The historical and sociological practice of treating peasant culture as backward, secondary, and circumscribed only encourages disruption and ultimately blocks the road to economic and political justice in a post-modern world.

More books from Taylor and Francis

Cover of the book The Communist Quest for National Legitimacy in Europe, 1918-1989 by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Media, Mobilization and the Umbrella Movement by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Social Work Practice for Promoting Health and Wellbeing by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book International Contractual and Statutory Adjudication by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book A History of Technoscience by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Unconscious Logic by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Principles of Public Finance by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book The Art Of Drama Teaching by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book The North Korean Economy by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Life Coaching by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Applied Policy Research by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Revival: The Church of England in the Eighteenth Century (1910) by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book The Sensory Basis and Structure of Knowledge by Rudolph M. Bell
Cover of the book Language Machines by Rudolph M. Bell
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy