000 01524cam a2200301 4500500
005 20250121082006.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aVillerbu, Soazig
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aLead, neighbors, and animals
260 _c2023.
500 _a65
520 _aA diary kept by a Swiss farmer from the Ozark Mountains allows us to attempt an analysis of what a farmer’s life was around 1840 in this region of Missouri. Célestin Guyenet lived inside three circles: a rural lead industry from which he hoped for individual profit as a farmer-miner inserted in market relations, a complex neighborhood made up of community solidarity and heavy social constraints and the anthropozoological community that constituted his farm, made of working and emotional relationships between humans and animals. An individual case like this, which reveals at least what was possible, even if it was not generally lived, opens up the debate on the nature of the American rural world of the first nineteenth century.
690 _aanimals
690 _aOzarks
690 _aUnited States
690 _aneighbors
690 _afarming
690 _alead
690 _aanimals
690 _aOzarks
690 _aUnited States
690 _aneighbors
690 _afarming
690 _alead
786 0 _nHistoire & Sociétés Rurales | 58 | 2 | 2023-01-04 | p. 81-113 | 1254-728x
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-histoire-et-societes-rurales-2022-2-page-81?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c499482
_d499482