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The Market and the <i>Oikos</i>, Vol. II: The Peasant and the Nomad in History: Ideas, History, and Modern China, cartea 27

Autor Hans Derks
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 mar 2022
Both Karl Marx and Max Weber inspired the writing of the two volumes of The Market and the Oikos. Weber coined a market versus oikos contradiction, in which oikos not only means house, household or family, but later also the state, while Marx saw a town versus country antagonism. Both scholars, however, explained insufficiently these most complicated concepts, let alone some mutual relationships. This second volume, The Market and the Oikos, Vol. II: The Peasant and the Nomad in History, continues the analysis of their antagonisms in their mutual relationships by providing the main practical characteristics in different historical, economic and sociological contexts, based on the writing of Max Weber as explained in Vol. I. While the first volume tried to characterize the relationships from economic and historical points of view, this second volume takes a historical/sociological angle. In both volumes, Hans Derks’ argument proceeds from early world historical examples to the present context of contemporary China, stressing the highly neglected role of nomads in history.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004513754
ISBN-10: 9004513752
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Ideas, History, and Modern China


Notă biografică

Hans Derks, Ph.D. (1986), Amsterdam University, taught at universities in the Netherlands and abroad. He has published many monographs and articles, often on China, including The History of the Opium Problem: The Assault on the East, ca. 1600-1950, (Brill, 2012); Victims and Perpetrators: Dutch Shoah, 1933/45 and beyond, (Brill, 2019); and the first volume of this set, The Market and the Oikos: The Relationship Between Religion and Capitalism in Modern China, (Brill, 2018). The author’s webpage is www.hderks.dds.nl.

Cuprins

Preface
Introduction to the Project
A Biographical Note
Acknowledgments
Sources
Abbreviations

PART 1: The Definition of Realities



1 Introduction
1Introduction to the Volume
2The Myth-Hunters
3Plants and Animals
4Death of an “Ancient Economy”
6Conflicts
7Plan of the Book

PART 2: Peasant Societies in Antiquity



2 Landscape with Cows, Seascape with Ships
1What is the Problem?
2A Wild, Barren Goat Land?
3Homer in the Cold
4‘The Extreme Mildness of the Seasons ...’
5A Seascape for Farmer – Mariners as Pirates
6Aegina as a Model?

3 The Little Acre of the Gods
1Nomads and Sedentary
2Plains and Mountains
3Four Plains, Five Worlds
4A New View of an Old Landscape
5Meat Consumption of/for Vegetarians
6The Little Acre of the Gods
7A Small Test
8The Tillage Complex

4 Autarkeia in Greek Theory and Practice
1Some General Issues
2The Oikos Controversy
3Aristotle’s Use of Autarchy
4Reflections on the Findings
5Conclusion

5 Aristotle and the ‘Milkmen’
1Milk
2The Oikos Family
3Who Drinks Milk?
4The Basic Institutions of Milk-Drinkers
5Drinkers Who Need and Like Milk

6 A Beautiful Evil
1Introduction
2Women and their Heroes
3Henpecked Husbands?
4The Macho Roman Empire
5Marginal Ideal Women
6Danaides: A Myth in Space
7A Mythic Chronology
8A Reconstruction
9Myth and the Truth of the Amazons
10 An Unnatural Theory of the Oikos
11 Achilles and His Amazon
12 Why Gods are Really People
13 Men and Women in Hellas
14 About the “Amazon Queen” Polyphemus
15 A Unity of Unequals

PART 3: The State and Its Minorities



7 The State, the “Biblical Peasants” and beyond
1Introducing a Historical Problem
2The Beginning of the End
3Imperial Monotheism
4The Original Theft
5The Second, Third, etc. Thefts
6West versus East
7The Definition of an Internal Enemy in the West
8Inventions of State Repressions
9A Few Hours Ago

8 How to Sedentarize Mobile Interests
1The Nomadic Jew as Guest
2Sombart’s Jewish Nomad
3The Police and the Medical Doctor
4A New Hero and His Nomads
5The Sedentarized “Ghetto-Jews as Guests”
6The Original Ghetto
7A Reflection on the “East Side of the Ghetto Problem”

PART 4: Nomadic Societies in Asian History



9 Elementary Characteristics of Mobile Societies
1Introduction
2Huns as “the Scourge of God”
3Mongols and Sedentary
4Elementary Characteristics

10 Nomadic Sex in Bible and in Semiotics
1A Virtual Reality
2Who-Is-Who and What-Is-What in Myth Land
3The Subject of the Discussion
4A Response to a “Nomadic Challenge”
5“My Oikos is My Castle”
6Patriarchal Prostitutes
7Nomadic Lovemaking
8A Small Historical Reflection

11 Linguistics of Death and Domination
1Introduction
2Race and Archaeology
3Horses and their Languages
4A Nomadic Monument

PART 5: The Market and the Oikos: An Epilogue



12 An Irrational Market versus a Rational Oikos? USA versus China?
1Introduction
2Young Protests
3“The World We Have Lost”
4Opium Banking in a Crown Colony
5Exorbitant Opium Revenues
6On the Chinese Side

13 Epilogue
1Peasants and Farmers
2The Present Market-Oikos “Reconstruction”
3Asian State Formation
4Supplement

Bibliography
Index