This book explores the experience of labour for ancient Greek farming communities using historical, archaeological, bioarchaeological, and ethnographic data. It offers a compelling and methodologically innovative approach using the moral economy, taskscapes, and embodiment as interpretative frames.
Reconstructing the lived experience of ancient farmers, the book defines the physical, conceptual, and ideological contours of the farmer's world. It highlights the complex, embedded, and entangled nature of Greek agrarian life and draws on a wide range of interdisciplinary evidence to create a cultural history of rural labour. By moving beyond economic abstractions, the study reframes agricultural labour as a meaningful social and bodily practice, central to identity, community, and survival.
The book will be of particular interest to researchers and students of ancient history, archaeology, gender studies, and rural studies. It also appeals to readers interested in labour, embodiment, the moral economy, and reconstructing antiquity through everyday experience.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1 The Farmer's Experience; 2 Farming from the Ground Up: Taskscapes and Lived Experience; 3 Between Sweat and Hunger: Fables and the Moral Economy of Agrarian Life; 4 Sensorial Embodiment: Women and Agrarian Labour; 5 The Body at Work: Labour across Rural Communities; 6 Conclusion: Reclaiming the Farmer's Experience