Indifferent but Mobilized: Rural Politics during the Interwar Period in Eastern and Western Europe

IF 0.3 2区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
D. Brett
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT What did peasants discuss at party meetings? Were they mobilized by ethnic politics or indifferent to them altogether? The end of the First World War brought about universal male suffrage in much of Europe, and with it the process of mass politics began. The concept of national indifference is important in understanding interwar politics, because this period is often studied teleologically with attention focused on extremism and nationalism as the primary mobilizing issue Agrarian movements have been under-researched, and when Agrarians have been studied, it has been through the prism of elite politics. This comparative paper seeks to redress this omission by looking at grassroots rural politics. The interwar countryside was marked by profound political, economic and social transformation but also in terms of what Robert Paxton has described as the ‘triple crisis of the countryside’ – worsening economic conditions, the declining status of the countryside and inadequate political representation. The paper will explore how reform and crisis impacted how agrarian politics functioned at a local level by asymmetrically comparing cases from Romania, Poland and Ireland, with the final case helping to contextualize Eastern Europe within the wider European experience This paper argues that the rural population was mobilized, but primarily in the context of local issues rather than national ethno-political questions. Local party organization was, to paraphrase James C Scott, the site ‘of an exchange of small arms fire’ in rural class conflict, as questions regarding the control of public space, generational conflict and power within the village mobilized peasants. Thus, I argue that it was the underlying socio-economic issues that mobilized the rural population, not nationalism. The dynamics of these conflicts were shaped by local economic, political and social power dynamics, and by using indifference as a concept, we can look more deeply at interwar politics from a grassroots perspective and develop a more nuanced understanding of local, national and European politics.
冷漠而动员:两次世界大战之间东欧和西欧的农村政治
农民在党的会议上讨论什么?他们是被种族政治动员起来的,还是对种族政治漠不关心?第一次世界大战的结束在欧洲大部分地区带来了普遍的男性选举权,由此开始了大众政治的进程。国家冷漠的概念对于理解两次世界大战之间的政治是很重要的,因为这一时期的研究通常是目的性的,关注的焦点是极端主义和民族主义,作为主要的动员问题。农业运动的研究不足,当农业主义者被研究时,它是通过精英政治的棱镜。这篇比较论文试图通过观察基层农村政治来纠正这一遗漏。两次世界大战之间的农村以深刻的政治,经济和社会变革为标志,但也以罗伯特·帕克斯顿所描述的“农村三重危机”为标志——经济状况恶化,农村地位下降,政治代表性不足。本文将通过对罗马尼亚、波兰和爱尔兰的案例进行不对称比较,探讨改革和危机如何影响地方层面上的农业政治运作,最后一个案例有助于将东欧置于更广泛的欧洲经验中。本文认为,农村人口被动员起来了,但主要是在地方问题的背景下,而不是在国家种族政治问题的背景下。用詹姆斯·C·斯科特(James C . Scott)的话来说,地方党组织是农村阶级冲突中“轻武器交锋”的场所,因为有关公共空间的控制、代际冲突和村里权力的问题动员了农民。因此,我认为动员农村人口的是潜在的社会经济问题,而不是民族主义。这些冲突的动态是由当地的经济、政治和社会权力动态形成的,通过将冷漠作为一个概念,我们可以从基层的角度更深入地看待两次世界大战之间的政治,并对当地、国家和欧洲的政治有更细致的了解。
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来源期刊
Central Europe
Central Europe HISTORY-
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: Central Europe publishes original research articles on the history, languages, literature, political culture, music, arts and society of those lands once part of the Habsburg Monarchy and Poland-Lithuania from the Middle Ages to the present. It also publishes discussion papers, marginalia, book, archive, exhibition, music and film reviews. Central Europe has been established as a refereed journal to foster the worldwide study of the area and to provide a forum for the academic discussion of Central European life and institutions. From time to time an issue will be devoted to a particular theme, based on a selection of papers presented at an international conference or seminar series.
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