Surface scatters and peasants' farmsteads : the Italic peasants in field survey site-classification schemes

Roman peasant studies have widely used data produced by central Italian field survey's projects in last decades. This procedure is tributary of the classification scheme used to interpret these archaeological remains, mainly based in the categories 'Villa' and 'Small Farm'....

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Autor principal: Knust, José
Formato: Documento de conferencia publishedVersion
Lenguaje:Portugués
Publicado: Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación. Centro de Estudios de Sociedades Precapitalistas 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://www.memoria.fahce.unlp.edu.ar/trab_eventos/ev.9937/ev.9937.pdf
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Sumario:Roman peasant studies have widely used data produced by central Italian field survey's projects in last decades. This procedure is tributary of the classification scheme used to interpret these archaeological remains, mainly based in the categories 'Villa' and 'Small Farm'. Both are determined by a pre established debate on the crises of Roman peasantry and rise of 'slave-run villa', as well preconceived images of what is a 'slave-run estate' and a "peasant farm". In this paper, I want to raise some questions about what I consider the basic assumptions driving the image of a 'peasant farm', which underlies this interpretation scheme. I believe this image is fundamentally linked to a traditional and out-of-date idea on what is a peasant - which had been seen as a backward social group, isolated, and solely concerned on the production of its subsistence. We can criticize it theoretically, from categories' perspective, as well empirically, from the perspective of some recent excavations of archaeological sites probably linked to the Italic peasantry