Revolution, a Sociological Interpretation

封面
Temple University Press, 1990 - 252 頁
"Examines why the study of revolution has attained such importance, and provides a systematic historical analysis of key ideas and theories. The book surveys the classical perspectives on revolution offered by nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century theorists, such as Marx, Weber, Durkheim, Tocqueville, and Freud. Kimmel argues that their perspectives on revolution were affected by the reality of living through the revolutions of 1848-1917, a relaity that raised curcial issues of class, state, bureaucracy , and motivation."--back cover.
 

內容

Alexis de Tocqueville and Revolutionary Ambivalence
25
Other Classical Perspectives
33
NonStructural Theories
46
The Disequilibrated Social System
53
The Psychology of Revolutionary Behavior
67
Aggregate Social Psychological Models
73
Geopolitical
83
Class Struggle and Revolution
116
The State and Revolution
145
A Structural Social Psychology
188
The Value of the Moral Economy Model
203
Conclusion
217
Notes
225
Index
240
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關於作者 (1990)

Michael S. Kimmel teaches Sociology at State University of New York at Stony Brook.

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