Anja Decker

Eine Tiefkühltruhe voller Fleisch

Selbstversorgerlandwirtschaft im Kontext sozialer Ungleichheit

Kurzlink: https://www.waxmann.com/artikelART102579

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Abstract

Using participatory observations and semi-structured interviews, this article examines different forms of subsistence farming in the rural Czech Republic. The study contributes to the renewed debate in European Ethnology on rurality and rural everyday life in late modern societies by focusing on the voices and perspectives of less privileged social groups and examining less visible practices of small-scale agricultural work. Against the background of far-reaching transformation processes in post-socialist societies, the three cases explored in the first part of this paper show that subsistence farming is an informal economic practice and moral economy that can strengthen the agency of members of lower strata. It is an important part of my informants’ economizing and income strategies, enables experiences of continuity in life and provides social recognition. The second part of the paper demonstrates that, in the light of the sometimes conflictual social differentiation of rural communities because of the influx of people from the academic creative milieu, ideals and practices of subsistence farming can produce contexts in which mutual rapprochement, appreciation and cooperation are possible. At the same time, the encounter between the two groups also highlights milieu differences, which are made visible and discussed here at the example of meat production and consumption.

Schlagworte
rural anthropology, informal economies, social inequality, subsistence farming, Czech Republic, meat

APA-Zitation
Decker A. (2018). Eine Tiefkühltruhe voller Fleisch: Selbstversorgerlandwirtschaft im Kontext sozialer Ungleichheit. Zeitschrift für Volkskunde, 114(2), 213-235. https://www.waxmann.com/artikelART102579