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Revolution and War

Cornell University Press (1996)

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  1. Reflections on the revolutionary wave in 2011.Colin J. Beck - 2014 - Theory and Society 43 (2):197-223.
    The “Arab Spring” was a surprising event not just because predicting revolutions is a difficult task, but because current theories of revolution are ill equipped to explain revolutionary waves where interactive causal mechanisms at different levels of analysis and interactions between the units of analysis predominate. To account for such dynamics, a multidimensional social science of revolution is required. Accordingly, a meta-framework for revolutionary theory that combines multiple levels of analysis, multiple units of analysis, and their interactions is offered. A (...)
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  • Revolutions and the international.George Lawson - 2015 - Theory and Society 44 (4):299-319.
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  • Towards the formalist dimension of war, or how Viktor Šklovskij used to be a soldier.Jan Levchenko - 2014 - Studies in East European Thought 66 (1-2):89-100.
    Viktor Šklovskij, the famous Russian literary theorist, and the founder of Russian Formalist School, published his first books in 1914, when World War I had just started. One of them consisted of the futuristic essay, Resurrection of the Word, first presented in December, 1913, and devoted to the problem of the death and resurrection of literature through the use of transrational language. Another book, entitled The Saturnine Fate, concerned archaic prose poetry devoted to the war that had just begun. Šklovskij (...)
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