Revolution and Counter-revolutionOpen University Press, 1990 - 90 síður Revolution remains a key concept in the social sciences. After the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution, a debate still rages over its causes and meaning. At the same time as, in Eastern Europe, much of what the Russian Revolution was believed to have stood for is being rejected, the Chinese leadership has reaffirmed its right to maintain revolutionary political orthodoxy by force. In this book Professor Calvert aims to show how revolution must by its nature be disputed. When people observe revolutions, their interpretations of what they are seeing are conditioned by changing intellectual fashion and by wishful thinking and so too are the theories derived from them. This book re-examines the place of revolution in modern social theory and at the same time reasserts the need for systematic study in the social sciences. |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 12
Síða 1
... fundamental threat to the values of the Free World . At the edges of the conflict , in the emerging Third World , insurgents struggling to free themselves from a colonial domination already on the retreat were caught up in the ...
... fundamental threat to the values of the Free World . At the edges of the conflict , in the emerging Third World , insurgents struggling to free themselves from a colonial domination already on the retreat were caught up in the ...
Síða 23
... fundamental problem , for us as for others , is that revolution is a social process . Hence what it ' really ' means is determined in terms not of some overall , abstract standard of measurement , but of the relevance of the process to ...
... fundamental problem , for us as for others , is that revolution is a social process . Hence what it ' really ' means is determined in terms not of some overall , abstract standard of measurement , but of the relevance of the process to ...
Síða 66
... fundamentally stable , and equilibrium is that normal state of society to which it will tend to return after ... fundamental change is inevitable ? A more systematic view is that of Johnson ( 1964 ; 1966 ) , to which Gurr relates ...
... fundamentally stable , and equilibrium is that normal state of society to which it will tend to return after ... fundamental change is inevitable ? A more systematic view is that of Johnson ( 1964 ; 1966 ) , to which Gurr relates ...
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Common terms and phrases
achieve action American Revolution analysis Arendt argues armed forces assumption bourgeois bourgeoisie Calvert Cambridge century challenge Chinese Revolution Chorley communist comparative historical concept conflict consolidation context counter-revolution coup d'état definition develop economic elite Engels European example existing explanations of revolution fact fascism followed France freedom French Revolution fundamental German Revolution Gurr happened Hence historian ideas individual institutional insurrection internal Iran Iranian Revolution jacquerie Johnson Jon Elster leaders Lenin logic major social revolution Marx Marxist mass means military model of revolution modern Moore movement nature Neil Smelser organization overthrow Paris Commune peasantry peasants phenomenon political violence proletariat psychological rational reason rebellion reform regime revol revolutionary outcome revolutionary situation role Russian Revolution seek significance Skocpol social change social revolutions social sciences social scientists society sociological sociologist Soviet structure theory of revolution Tilly traditional transformation University Press ution view of revolution