Revolution; a ReaderBruce Mazlish, Arthur D. Kaledin, David B. Ralston |
Contents
KARL GRIEWANKEmergence of the Concept of Revolution from | 13 |
LAWRENCE STONETheories of Revolution from World Politics | 44 |
GEORGE LICHTHEIMThe Concept of Ideology from History | 57 |
Copyright | |
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activity American areas army become Bolsheviks bourgeois bourgeoisie bureaucratic capitalist Castro cent century China Chinese Communist Chinese revolution civil Communism Communist Party concept Confucian consciousness Cuba Cuban Revolution culture democracy democratic doctrine economic elite Empire evil gentry existence fact Fascist feudal forces German groups guerrilla Hitler human ical ideas ideology imperialists industrial institutions intellectuals intelligentsia internal wars Japanese Kuomintang land landlords Latin leaders leadership Lenin liberal lution Mao Tse-tung Mao's Maoist Marx Marxist masses means Mensheviks ment military mobilization modern moral movement munist National Socialism National Socialist nationalist Nazi nomic organisation organization peasant association peasantry peasants people's period political population Populists problem proletariat reform regime revo revolutionary role rule rural Russian sense Social-Democratic society Soviet Stalin struggle theory tion tional tionary tive totalitarian traditional U.S. imperialism violence Western workers