Social origins of dictatorship and democracy : lord and peasant in the making of the modern world
By: MOORE JUNIOR, Barrington
.
Material type: 






Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livro Geral | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Livro Geral | 4.08M8211s (Browse shelf) | 1 | Available | 10012036 |
- Part one - Revolutionary origins of capitalist democracy - Chapter I - England and the contributions of violence to gradualism 1. Aristocratic impulses behind the transition to capitalism in the countryside 2. Agrarian aspects of the civil war 3. Enclosures and the destruction of the peasantry 4. Aristocratic rule for triumphant capitalism - Chapter II - Evolution and revolution in France 1. Contrasts with england and their origins 2. The noble response to commercial agriculture 3. Class relationships under royal absolutism 4. The aristocratic offensive and the collapse of absolutism 5. The peasants' relationship to radicalism during the revolution 6. Peasants against the revolution: the vendée 7. Social consequences of revolutionary terror 8. Recapitulation - Chapter III - The amrican civil war: the last capitalist revolution 1. Plantation and factory: an inevitable conflict? 2. Three forms of american capitalist growth 3. Toward an explanation of the causes of the war 4. The revolutinary impluse and its failure 5. The meaning of the war - Part two - Three routes to the modern world in Asia - Chapter IV - The decay of imperial China and the origns of communist variant 1. The upper classes and the imperial system 2. The gentry and the world of commeerce 3. The failure to adopt commercial agriculture 4. Collapse of the imperial system and rise of the warlords 5. The kuomintang interlude and its meaning 6. Rebellion, revolution, and the peasants - Chapter V - Asian fascism: Japan 1. Revolution from above: the response of the ruling classes to old and new threats 2. The absence of a peasant revolution 3. The meiji settlement: the new landlords and capitalism 4. Political consequences: the nature of japanese fascism - Chapter VI - Democracy in Asia: India and the trice of peaceful change 1. Relevance of the indian experience 2. Mogul India: obstacles to democracy 3. Village society: obstacles to rebellion 4. Changes produced by the british up to 1857 5. Pax britannica 1857-1947: a landlord's paradise? 6. The bourgeois link to the peasantry through nonviolence 7. A note on the extent and character of peasant violence 8. Independence and the price of peaceful change - Part three - Theoretical implications and projections - Chapter VII - The democratic route to modern society - Chapter VIII - Revolution from above and fascism - Chapter IX - The peasants and revolution
There are no comments for this item.