ABSTRACT

PREDOMINANTLY A RURAL NATION, Poland is most often depicted with urban scenes: steelworkers, trade unions, Communist party members, and Solidarity meetings. In contrast to this industrial vision, Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs views historical and recent changes and their agrarian consequences.During her many years in the Polish countryside, Dr. Nagengast has observed,studied, and worked side by side with farmers and other members of the agrarian class. Here she provides a first-hand perspective on the monumental failures of the Polish version of socialism, which were largely due to decisions that led the nation-state down a distinctly capitalist path to agrarian development. On the basis of her extensive research, Nagengast makes chilling forecasts about the impact of the accelerating development of capitalism on the culture, politics, and economy of Poland.This book will be useful to anthropologists, sociologists, and scholars interested in Eastern European and socialist studies.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|25 pages

Poles Apart

chapter 3|31 pages

History, Class, and Identity

chapter 5|26 pages

You Can't Get There from Here

chapter 6|26 pages

Peasants and Farmers in Wola Pławska

chapter 7|28 pages

Class Stratification in Wola Pławska

chapter 8|22 pages

Who Was in Charges Here?

chapter 9|22 pages

Who Is in Control?