15. Gerald Stourzh-Vorlesung zur Geschichte der Menschenrechte und der Demokratie


Lora Wildenthal

Equal and Free?
Waged Agricultural Laborers in the Prussian Reform Era


22. Mai 2024

© Eric Granquist

Lora Wildenthal ist John Antony Weir Professor of History und leitet das Center for the Study of Women, Gender and Sexuality an der Rice University, Houston, Texas. In ihrer Forschung hat sie sich mit den deutschen Kolonien aus geschlechtergeschichtlicher Sicht sowie Menschenrechtsbewegungen in der alten Bundesrepublik auseinandergesetzt. Derzeit beschäftigt sie sich mit der Geschichte von Arbeitsrechten als Menschenrechten, insbesondere der freien Lohnarbeit im frühen 19. Jahrhundert.

Auswahl aus den Veröffentlichungen: German Women for Empire, 1884-1945 (2001); Hg. mit Eric Ames und Marcia Klotz, Germany’s Colonial Pasts (2005); The Language of Human Rights in West Germany (2013); Hg. mit Jean Quataert, The Routledge History of Human Rights (2019).

Homepage von Lora Wildenthal

Abstract

In 1807 Prussian reformers announced the emancipation of subjected farmers. They thereby placed Prussia among the array of countries that legally freed enslaved, enserfed, and subjected people in the eighteenth and nineteeth centuries. The question of outcomes for freed farmers long organized the comparative history of emancipations. Did emancipation lead to farmers’ independence, or to their proletarianization? The latter was long the consensus for the Prussian case. Since the 1970s a revisionist historiography on Prussia has used agricultural and quantitative evidence to undo that consensus. This scholarship tells us that freed farmers in Prussia largely held onto their land. Moreover, it tells us that the agricultural labor done by free workers—waged workers who had never been subjected—was more important economically than that of subjected farmers already decades before emancipation. This lecture puts these free waged agricultural laborers at the center of the famous moment of peasant emancipation in Prussia. What were the outcomes for them? It traces how Prussian reformers connected the equality and freedom of these free waged agricultural laborers to their visions for economic and social reform. The free waged agricultural laborers came out of the Prussian Reform Era with less freedom than before—why?