Abstract
James Scott's and Samuel Popkin's theories must undergo the test of historical facts. The author considers three points: the village community; the individuals and the spirit of enterprise; and the peasant protest movements in Vietnam. Having not worked in exactly the same fields (South or Central Vietnam) or on the same periods (colonial or postcolonial eras), both, Scott and Popkin have generalized their own experiences. In fact, the Vietnamese peasants cling to “moral economy” or engage themselves in “political economy” according to the general situation and to what is at stake for them. Thus, the two explanatory schemes—Scott's moral economy and Popkin's political economy—cannot be used separately or one against the other but must be used together to permit an adequate consideration of the transformations of the Vietnamese peasantry.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference18 articles.
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4. Kleinen John . 1981. “Regional Development in Vietnam: An Early Communist Rebellion in Quang Ngai Province, 1930–1931.” Amsterdam: Center of Anthropology and Sociology, University of Amsterdam.
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