ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1983, is a major contribution to our understanding of how and why French rural peasant society became modernised by radical changes in the communications system – in particular, the coming of the railways. The author argues that complex changes in the transport systems, and their effects on agricultural market structures, finally brought traditional French rural civilisation to an end. With the extension of commercialisation, and the widening of horizons, new economic and social structures – and changed attitudes – rapidly came into being. Writing as an economic historian, the author has adopted an interdisciplinary approach to this study which incorporates economic, sociological, historical and geographical methods and data.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter Two|340 pages

Social Crisis

chapter 4|324 pages

Subsistence crises and popular misery

chapter 5|307 pages

Subsistence crises and popular protest

chapter 6|239 pages

An end to dearth

chapter Three|272 pages

Transport Revolution and Agriculture

chapter 8|175 pages

Modernizing market structures

chapter 9|133 pages

Agriculture in a changing market