Rural History 2010:
an international conference
dedicated to rural economies and societies
Until now, there has never been an international forum dedicated to the
study of rural history in all its forms. The British Agricultural
History Society is
aware of the diversity of work being undertaken in the field, sometimes
in cognate
disciplines such as gender or development studies or under the banner
of rural sociology
or environmental history, perhaps institutionally separated from the
historical mainstream by being undertaken in social science faculties,
agricultural colleges or NGOs. It is also keenly aware that the current
difficulties in the
world's agrarian economies – with the development of new markets, the
sudden appearance
of high prices, the spread of innovative and controversial
technologies, the
impact of land reform and the threat of long-term climatic change
– may well draw
renewed attention to the discipline. Within Europe, the
post-productivist countryside may
yet turn out to be an interlude rather than the final stage in rural
development.
Whilst we acknowledge the pioneering work of the European networks;
CORN, for the Rural History of the North sea area—the COST-funded
project Progressore for
the European Union; the Rural History Network embedded within the
European Social Science History Conference and the Arbeitskreis
für
Agrargeschichte — all of which have developed European
connections, the Society now wishes to develop,
deepen and internationalise these contacts. We have therefore taken the
initiative to convene the first international open meeting dedicated
solely to rural history.
This will take place in September 2010 at the University of Sussex,
Brighton, UK. We
hope to receive sufficient support from the rural history community for
the
conference to run over three days with three or four parallel sessions.
This meeting will be open to all rural historians as well as those
primarily interested in viewing contemporary conditions and likely
future developments with
a knowledge of the past. The conference does not accept that rural
history has any
single definition, nor does it admit any bounds, and the conference has
no intellectual
affiliation. It is open to those approaching rural history from any
perspective, ranging
from those of archaeology, anthropology and ethnography through rural
geography,
landscape studies and rural sociology to post-modern cultural
approaches to the
countryside. It will be equally concerned with the countryside as a
place of
production of foodstuffs as with as the countryside as a place of
consumption of leisure and the
location of heritage and national memory. Papers will be welcomed on
all periods
from the prehistoric to the very modern; and there are no geographical
limitations on the area of study. Comparative discussions which deal
with rural society as a
whole will be especially welcome, together with accounts which seek
parallels between
present day agrarian problems and the past.
It is intended that the conference should be the first in a series
of biennial or triennial conferences and the Brighton conference will
be the occasion when
either a European rural history society or a continuation committee of
some sort will be
formed.
The timetable for the conference will be as follows:
Nominations for the scientific committee should be received from
national and international societies, or individuals who wish to serve
on the
committee. The Society has nominated the editor of Agricultural History
Review,
Richard Hoyle, Professor of Rural History in the University of Reading,
UK, as its
chairman. It has also invited the chairmen of the three existing
European
networks, Professor Erik Thoen (University of Ghent), Dr Gerard Beaur
(CNRS, Paris) and Dr
Anton Schuurman Wageningen) to join the committee ex-officio. In
enlarging the
committee, the Society is especially eager to receive nominations from
outside
north-western Europe and from those working in emerging or
non-traditional fields of
rural history. All national societies and communities are asked to send
their
nominations to the chair of the British Agricultural History Society,
Dr Paul
Brassley, with short cvs of their nominees, by 1 December 2008.
A call for papers will be circulated with the names of the scientific
committee about Easter 2009. We invite proposals for two or three paper
sessions or
even linked sessions. In this event we require the names of the
chairman and
speakers, a short abstract of each paper (150-200 words) and a short cv
of each
participant including the chairman (150-200 words each). We intend to
make provision on the
conference website for potential session organisers to canvass for
support from
others interested in contributing to their area of expertise. Proposals
may also be made
for individual papers where, again, an abstract of 150-200 words and a
short cv should
be supplied.
The call for papers is expected to close on 1 December 2009, with a
provisional programme announced in February/March 2010.
The Society has established a conference committee, chaired by Dr
Nicola Verdon of the University of Sussex,
which will make the local arrangements. Accommodation will be provided
at the University of Sussex which is situated at Falmer, a few miles
from
Brighton. Brighton is a 30-40 minute train ride from Gatwick Airport
and roughly
50 minutes from central London. Brighton is an attractive seaside town
which, from
the early nineteenth-century onwards, has had a rakish reputation. For
those who
prefer accommodation off-campus, there is plenty of choice in Brighton
itself.
For a list of university approved guest hotels and hotels, see
www.sussex.ac.uk/about/hotels or see visitbrighton.com for further
details. Falmer is also on the
edge of the South Downs, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural
Beauty. Some delegates to the
conference may therefore wish to extend their visit to a holiday and
explore Brighton
itself, the surrounding countryside and coast, or London.
A conference website is under construction and will be launched later
in 2008. For the moment, expressions of interest or queries can be
directed to Prof. Richard
Hoyle, r.w.hoyle@reading.ac.uk,Dr Nicola Verdon.
n.j.verdon@sussex.ac.uk, or the chairman of the
Society, Dr Paul Brassley, p.brassley@plymouth.ac.uk.
revision 22 August 2008