Jim Devine wrote:

The plague upset traditional social relationships in the countryside,
setting the stage for full-blown capitalism. It raised the bargaining
power of the laborers who remained in many cases. But the landowners
struck back. In England, they struck back with the primitive
accumulation that Marx writes about, creating a proletariat by
expropriating the rural laborers, separating them from any claim to
land and other ways to independently support themselves. This created
the proletarian class (in itself, not for itself).

Huh? This does not accord with my education on the topic. The theoretical,
and hence overly schematized, history of the "transition" with which I'm
familiar is a good deal more tortuous and less cartoonish than what Jim
serves up here. It (still a cardboard version) goes a little something like
this...

The black death decimates the Western European population of peasants and
serfs. The resulting demographic imbalance results in their increased
bargaining power vis-a-vis their overlords, emboldening them to demand the
commutation of labor services and rents-in-kind and the introduction of
money-rents. Thus you get a schism between rent-collecting absentee
landlords and rent-paying tenant farmers. Agricultural land can now be put
to its maximum rent-yielding use and this encourages and rewards enclosures
and a complex system of stratification emerges in the countryside with
vagrants and hired hands and household-based handicraft producers alongside
the tenant farmers (a.k.a. the "yeoman" farmers). Simple commodity
manufacture is going full throttle and the labor force eventually shoehorned
into the Lancashire mills isn't anywhere close to existing yet!

Sometimes I weary of Devine pedantically impressing his modes of production
stamp upon messy empirical details.

JG

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