Published July 29, 2021 | Version v1
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The Horka Litter Raking Incident: on Foresters and Peasants in Nineteenth-Century Moravia

  • 1. Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences

Description

Litter raking was a traditional forest use representing an interface between forestry and agriculture. In forest history, it has usually been presented as the harmful removal by peasants of biomass, which was gradually eliminated by foresters, leading to better forest preservation. Based on the example of an exceptionally well-documented case of illegal litter raking in Moravia in 1845, in this paper I argue that juxtaposing foresters and peasants in connection with litter raking masks a much more complicated reality. Neither foresters nor peasants can be interpreted as homogenous groups because there were significant differences in the opinions and agendas of various representatives within these groups. In addition, opinions were not static on either side but could change in a discursive pattern. In a wider context, the environmental historical analysis of the Horka litter raking incident facilitates the understanding of larger societal processes that influenced past woodland management in Central Europe, and therefore current ecosystems too.

Notes

This paper was supported as a long-term research development project no. RVO 67985939 and by grant TO01000132 from the Technological Agency of the Czech Republic through a project financed by EEA and Norway Grants.

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