Abstract
Family farm ideology encapsulates one strand of the historical relations of Americans to the land. An examination of gender differences in historical experiences of land in Iowa suggests that men and women have had different patterns of access to land and to profits from agricultural enterprises. Where men have seen the land as a resource to be exploited, women have tended to view land as a setting for reciprocal interaction.
In the late nineteenth century the state promoted the family unit as a source of cheap labor in the development of the central United States to provide capital for the industrialization of the Atlantic seaboard. It was on this basis that Iowa farming developed. Before World War II the farm man, as head of the farm operation, managed the production of farm commodities and conducted the farm market transactions; the woman reproduced the farm labor force and exchanged goods and services locally through personal contacts.
Since World War II the family farm has changed structurally, but the family farm ideology has persisted as a basis for the construction of farm policy emphasizing private property and free enterprise. Such an ideology is no longer consistent with a goal of economic democracy. The experience of women on the land provides elements of an alternative ideology which stresses reciprocal nurture, cooperation and shared good.
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Deborah Fink is an anthropologist who has done research on rural women in Denmark and the United States. Her book,Open Country, Iowa: Rural Women, Tradition and Change, was published in October, 1986. Currently she is doing research in rural Nebraska on the experiences of women in the period from 1930 to 1950.
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Fink, D. Constructing rural culture: Family and land in Iowa. Agric Hum Values 3, 43–53 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01535484
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01535484