Analysis of Jack A. Goldstone's Revolution and Rebellion in the Early Modern World

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A01=Etienne Stockland
Agrarian Bureaucratic States
Author_Etienne Stockland
breakdown
Breakdowns
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Collapse
comparative historical sociology
conflict
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Early Modern
early modern Asia Europe comparison
Early Modern Eurasia
Early Modern Revolutions
Early Modern States
Early Modern World
elite conflict analysis
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fiscal crisis models
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Goldstone's Revolution
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intra-elite
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Mass Mobilization Potential
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Political Instability Task Force
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revolutions
social upheaval dynamics
sociology
state
State Breakdown
state formation theory
structural causes of political revolutions
Theda Skocpol
Turkish Ottoman Empire
West Divergence
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781912303779
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Macat International Limited
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Understanding why revolutions take place when they do, and as they do, is important in itself. Understanding how they are rooted in the societies they upend – and the ways in which those societies share crucial similarities – is arguably even more so.

The enduring influence of Jack Goldstone's Revolution and Rebellion lies as much in the challenge that it issues to the long-dominant model of ‘western exceptionalism’ (the idea that it was early modern Europe's distinctive history that launched it on the path to world domination) as it does in the book's persuasive account of revolutions rooted in a four stage process that advances from fiscal crisis, through inter-elite conflict and mass-mobilization potential, to the breakdown and re-making of culture and ideology.

It can be argued that this unexpected outcome – one that the author himself did not anticipate – is the product of an acute problem-solving ability, one that made Goldstone particularly receptive to alternative possibilities. His insistence that early modern and modern European and Asian peoples have vastly more in common than was generally recognised, and followed a similar path of advanced organic development that left Qing China as vulnerable to revolution as the France of the Ancien Régime, has not only become a central contention of early 21st century sociology; it has also underpinned the creation of multiple theoretical models that have nothing to do with revolution. None of this would have been possible had not Goldstone challenged himself by asking questions that other scholars had supposed had mundane answers.

Etienne Stockland is researching a PhD in Environmental History at Columbia University.

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