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The Limits Of Rural Capitalism Family Culture And Markets In Montcalm Manitoba 18701940 Kenneth M Sylvester

  • SKU: BELL-5148696
The Limits Of Rural Capitalism Family Culture And Markets In Montcalm Manitoba 18701940 Kenneth M Sylvester
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The Limits Of Rural Capitalism Family Culture And Markets In Montcalm Manitoba 18701940 Kenneth M Sylvester instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Toronto Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 14.78 MB
Pages: 296
Author: Kenneth M. Sylvester
ISBN: 9780802048080, 0802048080
Language: English
Year: 2001

Product desciption

The Limits Of Rural Capitalism Family Culture And Markets In Montcalm Manitoba 18701940 Kenneth M Sylvester by Kenneth M. Sylvester 9780802048080, 0802048080 instant download after payment.

"The Limits of Rural Capitalism" is an important study of the social and economic development of the Municipality of Montcalm, a largely French-Canadian community in southern Manitoba. It challenges the view in prairie historiography that agriculture had commercialized before the west was opened to settlement, and that ethnic communities alone resisted the market's potential. Using a novel combination of demographic, financial, and legal evidence, Sylvester shows that both Ontario and Quebec migrants came west within family networks, and that neither economic individualism nor ethnic clustering overshadowed the importance of family strategies. In an environment where landed proprietorship was the norm, the demands of parents on the unpaid labour of their children constrained the growth of labour markets, and concerns for farm succession limited the accumulation of wealth.

In the shadow of an industrializing and urbanizing world, these people, who came mainly from the District of Montreal and eastern Ontario, sometimes via New England, raised large families, drew largely on the unpaid labour of kin, owned their own farms, limited financial entanglements with outsiders, and established multiple heirs. While household autonomy diminished over time, the limits of rural capitalism persisted.

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