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Fields Without Dreams: Defending the Agrarian Idea Hardcover – April 2, 1996
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Victor Davis Hanson
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Victor Davis Hanson
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Print length320 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherFree Press
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Publication dateApril 2, 1996
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Dimensions5.75 x 1.25 x 8.25 inches
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ISBN-100684822997
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ISBN-13978-0684822990
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
"Any book about farming must now not be romantic or naïve, but brutally honest," writes fifth-generation grape farmer Victor Hanson, who is also a professor of Greek at California State University in Fresno. Hanson knows about the brutality of farming--in 1983 a glut of foreign raisins coupled with domestic overproduction caused the price of raisins to plummet from $1,300 a ton to $450, devastating small farmers in the San Joaquin valley. In this erudite look at the disappearance of the family farm and the rise of modern agribusiness, he argues that the loss of agrarians lies at the root of many of the ills that plague modern American society.
From Publishers Weekly
We are in the penultimate stage of the death of agrarianism, says the author, a fifth-generation vine and fruit grower. Hanson (The Other Greeks) has written an eloquent and bitter elegy for the American family farm. For more than a century, his family has grown grapes (for raisins) and plums in California's San Joaquin Valley. In 1983, the raisin market crashed, marking the start of an ongoing agricultural depression. Hanson relates here the grim story of his and his neighbors' experiences. He is deeply concerned about the cultural and historical ramifications of eliminating the family farm, reminding us that the origins of Western civilization and democracy arose from a vibrant agrarianism. He charges that the American people no longer care how they get their food, as long as it is fresh, firm and cheap. To stem the decline of the family farm, the author calls for regulation of commodity brokerages, property and irrigation taxes based on size and presence of owners and elimination of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Hanson, a raisin grower and professor of Greek at California State University at Fresno, writes passionately about the life and times of raisin farmers in the San Joaquin Valley during the agricultural depression of the 1980s. Referring to farmers as "yeomen," he narrates the experiences of neighbors and friends who work long days with low incomes and no vacation to feed a society that has little knowledge or understanding of agriculture and its role. One can feel his frustration and anger as he describes a host of unpredictable variables that can make or break a raisin yeoman. Weather, pests, brokers, distributors, cooperatives, university advisors, and corporate absentee owners share the responsibility for the rapid decline of American agriculture. He admonishes yeomen themselves for their unyielding conservatism and support of elected officials who do not seem concerned about their plight. Hanson makes a plea for restoration of the agrarian ethic that has nearly disappeared from American culture. By comparison, he offers a model of respect and dignity afforded farmers in Greek society, which he claims led to ideas of constitutional government, private land ownership, and free enterprise. This provocative book urges us to put a halt to the impending disappearance of the nation's agrarian infrastructure lest it threaten the very future of American democracy. Recommended for academic and larger public libraries.?Irwin Weintraub, Rutgers Univ. Libs., New Brunswick, N.J.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
An unusually literate work, at once paean and dirge, on the decline of family farming, which also happens to mark ``the end of a historical cycle in America.'' Hanson (The Western Way of War, 1989) is both a professor of Greek and a farmer in the Central Valley of California. This lends his book a refreshingly antiquarian air in the gloom-and-doom library of current, resoundingly modern environmental writing. Certainly few other writers share Hanson's comfort in likening the raisin farmers of Modesto to the hero Ajax of the Homeric epics or to Aeschylus's virtuous man, who ``did not wish to seem just, but to be so''; few even command the literary sources that would enable them to do so. His deep learning also affords the author a certain archness that is not unpleasant. ``Is it not odd,'' he writes with nice disdain for present orthodoxies, ``to rise at dawn with Japanese-, Mexican-, Pakistani-, Armenian-, and Portuguese-American farmers and then be lectured at noonday 40 miles away on campus about cultural sensitivity and the need for `diversity' by the affluent white denizens of an exclusive, tree-studded suburb?'' In a ringing defense of the old ways of farming and of rural life, Hanson gives us the histories of men like Rhys Burton, who died at the age of 86 after a lifetime of working the land, and the raisin magnate Bus Barzagus, observing with passion and sorrow that their way of life will likely soon disappear, thanks in part to a federal system of agricultural subsidies that favors large-scale, industrial farm corporations over individual ``yeomen.'' That system, Hanson suggests, hastens the decline of our democracy of freeholders and the rise of agro-corporate tyranny. The Southern Agrarians made much the same point in the mid-1930s, when agricultural apocalypse announced itself in the Dust Bowl. So today does Wendell Berry, alongside whose agrarian essays this intriguing book should be shelved. -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Review
... astute, often bitterly funny and the angriest book I've read in ages. -- The New York Times Book Review, John Hildebrand
Victor Hanson understands the intimicy that should exist between men and land, and how the two have mutually benefitted from an almost mysterious interchange. But as machinery and other things separate crops from the agrarian, Hanson also knows what is lost. This he eloquently explains in the only book of its kind written by a working farmer. It is not only humanity that needs his words; the planet does. -- James Dickey
Victor Hanson understands the intimicy that should exist between men and land, and how the two have mutually benefitted from an almost mysterious interchange. But as machinery and other things separate crops from the agrarian, Hanson also knows what is lost. This he eloquently explains in the only book of its kind written by a working farmer. It is not only humanity that needs his words; the planet does. -- James Dickey
About the Author
Victor Davis Hanson is Professor of Greek at California State University in Fresno.
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Product details
- Publisher : Free Press; First Edition, First Printing (April 2, 1996)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0684822997
- ISBN-13 : 978-0684822990
- Item Weight : 1.05 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.75 x 1.25 x 8.25 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#922,535 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #4,935 in Agricultural Science (Books)
- #7,544 in Industries (Books)
- #23,544 in Nature & Ecology (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
66 global ratings
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Top reviews from the United States
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Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2020
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We don't seem to care about farmers. We want organic, fresh foods... yet we settle for factory farms and make it even harder for real family farms to survive. We settle for food from other countries and don't buy what is just around the corner. We have lost the sense of importance of the land. Many claim to be "green" but the only green they care about is on the dollar bills.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2019
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I grew up in this once, wonderful area. I played in grape vineyards, picked peaches & swam in the river. Over the years, going back to visit relatives, my heart would break at the decline. Very well written & in glad for all the pages at the back of the book to write my memories of my childhood.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2021
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Bought this book for my son who, as an academic liberal with conservative parents, is having trouble understanding his Pasco, Washington previous-generation family farm heritage. I suspect Hanson’s book will only be fully appreciated by fellow travelers along the road of the demise of the family farm and American democracy, but for those with curiosity and an open mind, it is uniquely illuminating. Wonderfully told stories of real people in the context of modern history and government.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2019
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Wake up America. We need to save the family farm & farmer
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2019
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We are central California cattle ranchers, alum of Cal Poly and Fresno State. Love this man’s insight
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2018
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Victor Davis Hanson knows his stuff and has the historical knowlege to back his opinions.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2010
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This book is, without question, one of the finest works about the decline of the family farm, specifically the harsh realities of California agriculture during the 1980s (written from the perspective of the late 1990s). The profiles of the last holdout "yeoman" are compelling and full blooded. But what's even more interesting is how, through the small details and the individual anecdotes, Hanson is able to diagnose the larger trends and social consequences of this decline.
One thing other reviewers haven't pointed out is that this book is really a warm-up, the personal backstory, for the much tighter and much more damning argument put forward in Hanson's book "The Land Was Everything." That book is an easy five star, mainly because it is so finely argued and so elegantly written. I have turned passages over and over with my wife ever since I finished the last page. You just can't read some of those paragraphs once. They are simply too packed with implication and subtle observation, based on years of real-life experience.
It is also a warm-up for his book "Mexifornia," which separates out in a humane and clear-eyed way the realities of illegal immigration in Central California. Like "The Land Was Everything," this book is a classic in the genre and will be read for insight long into the future. So, all in all, these other two books might be approached with more benefit first, before turning back to this mid-way point in Hanson's thought. Anybody who is interested in learning what it takes to grow grapes for raisins will be interested in this earlier account.
My only question is: Why aren't Hanson's books on agriculture better known? The quality of writing and thought are far superior to a Michael Pollan (who is really too urban) or even a Wendell Berry (who tends to be too abstract or ponderous). There is so much in these books that, perhaps contrary to most expectations, liberal readers interested in the dynamics of social class or race, the construction of gender, the criticisms of corporate capitalism, and the problems of environmental stewardship will find much to ponder. Conservative readers will be equally challenged by the concern for virtue, the difficulty of good government, and the inevitable problems of modernity.
One thing other reviewers haven't pointed out is that this book is really a warm-up, the personal backstory, for the much tighter and much more damning argument put forward in Hanson's book "The Land Was Everything." That book is an easy five star, mainly because it is so finely argued and so elegantly written. I have turned passages over and over with my wife ever since I finished the last page. You just can't read some of those paragraphs once. They are simply too packed with implication and subtle observation, based on years of real-life experience.
It is also a warm-up for his book "Mexifornia," which separates out in a humane and clear-eyed way the realities of illegal immigration in Central California. Like "The Land Was Everything," this book is a classic in the genre and will be read for insight long into the future. So, all in all, these other two books might be approached with more benefit first, before turning back to this mid-way point in Hanson's thought. Anybody who is interested in learning what it takes to grow grapes for raisins will be interested in this earlier account.
My only question is: Why aren't Hanson's books on agriculture better known? The quality of writing and thought are far superior to a Michael Pollan (who is really too urban) or even a Wendell Berry (who tends to be too abstract or ponderous). There is so much in these books that, perhaps contrary to most expectations, liberal readers interested in the dynamics of social class or race, the construction of gender, the criticisms of corporate capitalism, and the problems of environmental stewardship will find much to ponder. Conservative readers will be equally challenged by the concern for virtue, the difficulty of good government, and the inevitable problems of modernity.
44 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2020
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Good buy
Top reviews from other countries
Lifestooshort
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoy real food while you can still get it!
Reviewed in Canada on July 6, 2018Verified Purchase
Excellent, honest, and realistic about farming in North America. Someday it's all going to come home to roost and cheap food will be a thing of the past but many of us that have farmed or are hanging on by our teeth now will never live long enough to see that day and the land will get sucked up by more houses and developements. Fake food will become (not an oddity like the lab created meat now being marketed.......hey why worry about GMO's if you eat this crap??) mainstream and those living during that time will be lucky to even have that. VDH rocks!









