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Contingent Countryside - Settlement, Economy, and Land Use in the Southern Argolid Since 1700 (Hardcover)
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Contingent Countryside - Settlement, Economy, and Land Use in the Southern Argolid Since 1700 (Hardcover)
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The essays in this volume are united by their attention to the many
ways in which residents of Greece's southern Argolid peninsula have
attempted to shelter, feed, and advance the economic situation of
their families over the last three centuries. This work juxtaposes
a series of research projects undertaken in various communities,
projects that, taken together, have made the southern Argolid the
focus of more ethnographic and ethnohistorical study than any other
comparable region of Greece. Ethnographic, geographic, historical,
and archaeological methodologies are integrated to yield an image
of the southern Argolid as a contingent countryside whose
boundaries, character, people, and external connections have been
reconfigured time and again.
Such notions strengthen general reformulations occurring within
Greek ethnography and speak directly to archaeological attempts to
connect the Greek past and present. This volume, the fourth in a
series of books deriving from the Argolid Exploration Project
conducted by Stanford University, sets forth the material
conditions of rural Greek life as mutable and negotiated in ways
that complement archaeological interest in the repeated settlement
fluctuations of the Greek past. It also exemplifies recent
ethnographic shifts in conceiving other aspects of modern Greek
life.
The volume replaces assumptions of village longevity with inquiry
into what causes settlements to form and grow or to decline. It
places idealized inheritance patterns alongside records of actual
land transactions. Houses expand, contract, and change over time.
The social boundaries among shepherds, farmers, and sailors blur
through an exploration of personal occupation histories. In short,
the book reexamines and questions many of the categories and
concepts by which rural Greece has long been represented.
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