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E-grāmata: Scripting Revolution: A Historical Approach to the Comparative Study of Revolutions

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  • Formāts: 448 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Oct-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Stanford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780804796194
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  • Formāts: 448 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Oct-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Stanford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780804796194

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"This book is long overdue and will undoubtedly become a landmark in the comparative study of revolutions."Darrin McMahon, Dartmouth College

The "Arab Spring" was heralded and publicly embraced by foreign leaders of many countries that define themselves by their own historic revolutions. The contributors to this volume examine the legitimacy of these comparisons by exploring whether or not all modern revolutions follow a pattern or script. Traditionally, historians have studied revolutions as distinct and separate events. Drawing on close familiarity with many different cultures, languages, and historical transitions, this anthology presents the first cohesive historical approach to the comparative study of revolutions.

This volume argues that the American and French Revolutions provided the genesis of the revolutionary "script" that was rewritten by Marx, which was revised by Lenin and the Bolshevik Revolution, which was revised again by Mao and the Chinese Communist Revolution. Later revolutions in Cuba and Iran improvised further. Tis script is once again on display in the capitals of the Middle East and North Africa, and it will serve as the model for future revolutionary movements.



This volume of essays proposes a new, historical approach to the comparative study of revolutions by exploring the ways in which they create, inherit, or extend recognizable scripts for political action and social action.

Recenzijas

"The comparative study of revolutions has been left to sociologists and political scientists for too long. This book is long overdue and will undoubtedly become a landmark in the comparative study of revolutions and a spur to further research on revolutions."Darrin McMahon, Dartmouth College "An important and exciting book in several respects, this volume provides a rare opportunity for today's historians to engage in some hard-nosed, systematic comparative history in a highly constructive manner while greatly widening their own personal perspective on the spectrum of modern revolutions. It also makes a splendid teaching tool." Jonathan Israel, H-France "Keith Michael Baker and Dan Edelstein have edited an important and timely book that reassesses how the concept of revolution has evolved over the past three centuries....[ T]he editors are right to insist that humanists can and should get back into the comparative revolutions business."Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, Journal of Modern History

Introduction 1(24)
Keith Michael Baker
Dan Edelstein
Part I Genealogies of Revolution
Did the English Have a Script for Revolution in the Seventeenth Century?
25(16)
Tim Harris
God's Revolutions: England, Europe, and the Concept of Revolution in the Mid-seventeenth Century
41(16)
David R. Como
Every Great Revolution Is a Civil War
57(14)
David Armitage
Part II Writing the Modern Revolutionary Script
Revolutionizing Revolution
71(32)
Keith Michael Baker
Constitutionalism: The Happiest Revolutionary Script
103(15)
Jack Rakove
From Constitutional to Permanent Revolution: 1649 and 1793
118(13)
Dan Edelstein
Scripting the French Revolution, Inventing the Terror: Marat's Assassination and its Interpretations
131(17)
Guillaume Mazeau
The Antislavery Script: Haiti's Place in the Narrative of Atlantic Revolution
148(21)
Malick W. Ghachem
Part III Rescripting the Revolution
Scripting the German Revolution: Marx and 1848
169(12)
Gareth Stedman Jones
Reading and Repeating the Revolutionary Script: Revolutionary Mimicry in Nineteenth-Century France
181(18)
Dominica Chang
"Une Revolution Vraiment Scientifique": Russian Terrorism, the Escape from the European Orbit, and the Invention of a New Revolutionary Paradigm
199(14)
Claudia Verhoeven
Scripting the Russian Revolution
213(18)
Ian D. Thatcher
Part IV Revolutionary Projections
You Say You Want a Revolution: Revolutionary and Reformist Scripts in China, 1894--2014
231(20)
Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Yidi Wu
Mao's Little Red Book: The Spiritual Atom Bomb and Its Global Fallout
251(16)
Alexander C. Cook
The Reel, Real and Hyper-Real Revolution: Scripts and Counter-Scripts in Cuban Documentary Film
267(20)
Lillian Guerra
Writing on the Wall: 1968 as Event and Representation
287(20)
Julian Bourg
Scripting a Revolution: Fate or Fortuna in the 1979 Revolution in Iran
307(18)
Abbas Milani
The Multiple Scripts of the Arab Revolutions
325(20)
Silvana Toska
Afterword 345(10)
David A. Bell
Contributors 355(6)
Notes 361(62)
Index 423
Keith M. Baker is Professor of Early Modern European History at Stanford University. His books include What's Left of Enlightenment? and Inventing the French Revolution.

Dan Edelstein is Professor of French and History at Stanford University. He is the author of The Terror of Natural Right: Republicanism, the Cult of Nature, and the French Revolution, which won the 2009 Oscar Kenshur Book Prize.