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Revoluties, staatsgrepen regime change samenvatting van ALLE literatuur (2023/2024) $6.85   Add to cart

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Revoluties, staatsgrepen regime change samenvatting van ALLE literatuur (2023/2024)

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Dit is een samenvatting van alle literatuur die je moet kennen voor het vak Revoluties, staatsgrepen en regime change (GE3V22001) gegeven aan de Universiteit Utrecht. Het bevat samenvattingen van o.a. Tilly, Skocpol, Bell, Motadel en Clark.

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  • December 6, 2023
  • 22
  • 2023/2024
  • Summary
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Introduction to the historiographical debate.......................................................................3
Lynn Hunt and Jack R. Censer, The French Revolution and Napoleon: Crucible of the
Modern World (London, 2017), preface.........................................................................3
David Motadel, ‘Global Revolution’, in: David Motadel (ed.), Revolutionary World:
Global Upheaval in the Modern Age (Cambridge, 2021), 1-37......................................3
1848 and the Arab Spring – ‘democratic transitions’?........................................................4
Christopher Clark, ‘Why should we think about the Revolutions of 1848 now?’, London
Review of Books, 41/5 (2019), 12-16............................................................................4
Kurt Weyland, ‘The Arab Spring: Why the Surprising Similarities with the Revolutionary
Wave of 1848?’, Perspectives on Politics 10/4 (2012), 917-934....................................4
Roger Heacock, ‘Comparing Incomparables: The Spring of Peoples and the Fall of
States – 1848 and 2011’, in: Eberhard Kienle and Nadine Sika (eds.), The Arab
Uprisings: Transforming and Challenging State Power (London, 2015), 9-37...............5
French Revolution I: From the beginnings to the proclamation of the Republic..................6
Lynn Hunt and Jack R. Censer, The French Revolution and Napoleon: Crucible of the
Modern World (London, 2017), chapters 1 and 2..........................................................6
H1 France’s World in 1789.......................................................................................6
H2 The Power of the People, 1789-92......................................................................7
Theory and revolution I: Classical philosophical perspectives............................................9
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party [1848, English
translation by Samuel Moore, 1888], chapters 1 and 2..................................................9
H1 Bourgeois and Proletarians.................................................................................9
H2 Proletarians and Communists.............................................................................9
Hannah Arendt, On Revolution, 1963, chapter 1, sections 2 and 4; chapter 2, section 1
and beginning of section 2...........................................................................................10
H1.2 The Meaning of Revolution.............................................................................10
H1.4........................................................................................................................ 10
H2.1 The Social Question.......................................................................................11
French Revolution II: The Terror and rise of military regimes...........................................11
Lynn Hunt and Jack R. Censer, The French Revolution and Napoleon: Crucible of the
Modern World (London, 2017), chapters 3 and 4........................................................11
H3 A Republic in Constant Crisis, 1792-94.............................................................11
H4 The Power of the Military, 1794-1799................................................................12
Theory and revolution II: Structures, class and state........................................................14
Charles Tilly, European Revolutions, 1492-1992 (Oxford 1993), 1-20.........................14
Theda Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions. A comparative analysis of France,
Russia and China (Cambridge 1979), 3-42.................................................................15
French Revolution III: Napoleon and the revolutionary heritage.......................................17
Lynn Hunt and Jack R. Censer, The French Revolution and Napoleon: Crucible of the
Modern World (London, 2017), chapter 5, 6 and conclusion.......................................17
H5 From Bonapartist Republic to Napoleonic Empire, 1800-1807..........................17
H6 The Napoleonic Eagle Soars and Finally Plummets, 1808-1815.......................18
Conclusion: Crucible of the Modern World..............................................................19
Theory and revolution III: Recent historiographical perspectives: the global spread of
ideas................................................................................................................................ 19




1

,Keith Michael Baker and Dan Edelstein, ‘Introduction’, in: Keith Michael Baker and Dan
Edelstein, Scripting Revolution: A Historical Approach to the Comparative Study of
Revolutions (Stanford, 2015).......................................................................................19




2

, Introduction (p. 1-14)..............................................................................................19
Revolutionizing Revolution (p. 71-102)...................................................................20
David A. Bell and Yair Mintzker, ‘Introduction’, in: David A. Bell and Yair Mintzker (ed.),
Rethinking the Age of Revolutions: France and the Birth of the Modern World (Oxford,
2018), xiii-xxiv.............................................................................................................. 20




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