Were Acadians better off than their rural counterparts in old regime France? Did they enjoy a Golden Age? To what degree did a distinct Acadian identity emerge before the wars and deportations of the mid-eighteenth century? In Something of a Peasant Paradise?, Gregory Kennedy compares Acadie in North America with a region of western France, the Loudunais, from which a number of the colonists originated. Kennedy considers the natural environment, the role of the state, the economy, the seigneury, and local governance in each place to show that similarities between the two societies have been greatly underestimated or ignored. The Acadian colonists and the people of the Loudunais were frontier peoples, with dispersed settlement patterns based on kin groups, who sought to make the best use of the land and to profit from trade opportunities. Both societies were hierarchical, demonstrated a high degree of political agency, and employed the same institutions of local governance to organize their affairs and negotiate state demands. Neither group was inherently more prosperous, egalitarian, or independent-minded than the other. Rather, the emergence of a distinct Acadian identity can be traced to the gradual adaptation of traditional methods, institutions, and ideas to their new environmental and political situations. A compelling comparative analysis based on archival evidence on both sides of the Atlantic, Something of a Peasant Paradise? Challenges the traditional historiography and demonstrates that Acadian society shared many of its characteristics with other French rural societies of the period.
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A study of Acadian and French rural societies that challenges conventional interpretations of identity and agency in the Atlantic world.
"In Acadian historiography, Something of a Peasant Paradise? is a healthily revisionist work that will alter our understanding and stimulate productive and ongoing interpretive debate." John Reid, Department of History, Saint Mary's University "Something of a Peasant Paradise? is groundbreaking. Though several important studies of Acadia have appeared in the last decade, none focuses strictly on Acadian society and none makes an explicit comparison to the sending society - ancien regime France. "In revising conventional wisdom, Kennedy has provided much food for thought in a book that is engagingly written and grounded in significant archival research on both sides of the Atlantic." Ronald Rudin, Canadian Historical Review
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780773543423
Publisert
2014-03-20
Utgiver
Vendor
McGill-Queen's University Press
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
288

Biographical note

Gregory M.W. Kennedy is assistant professor of history at the Universite de Moncton.