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4 - Modernization versus tradition: new views and old on agriculture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jon Cohen
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
Giovanni Federico
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi, Pisa
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Summary

4.1 Stefano Jacini, chairman of the commission that produced the great survey of Italian agriculture in the 1880s, observed in his introduction that ‘we still find many different agricultural Italies’ (Jacini 1882–6). This simple, frequently quoted observation has provided justification for agricultural historians in Italy to focus on small areas (a region or a province) instead of the country as a whole and to stress differences in environment, crop mix, techniques and institutions more than similarities. While often rich in local details, this approach poses a challenge for the reviewer concerned as much with the forest as with individual trees. The research fails to adhere to a single format, to ask standard questions and thus to provide comparable kinds of answers. The studies are difficult to review as a group and almost impossible to use as a source for national trends in productivity, crop yields and overall output. We draw on them where appropriate but rely for the most part on the few studies that do attempt to deal with Italian agriculture as a whole.

Until recently, it was generally accepted – Romeo (1963) was a conspicuous dissenter from this consensus – that Italian agriculture was technologically backward and subsistence-oriented. As Renato Zangheri, a well-known agricultural historian, observed (1969, p. 53): ‘[Italian] agriculture has never sustained a regular and general development.’ Most scholars argued that landlords were largely (but not exclusively) to blame for agriculture's unimpressive performance.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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