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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Information
About the Author
A Note on the Reproductions
Preface
SECTION ONE - Prehistory: Insights and Limitations
1 - The Concept of “Revolution”: From Tradition to Modernity
2 - Interpreting the English Revolutions: Hobbes, Harrington, and Locke
3 - Stages of Development: French Physiocrats and the Scottish Historical School
4 - The American Theory of Political Revolution
5 - The Contradictions of the French Revolution (1): Barnave and His Contemporaries
6 - The Contradictions of the French Revolution (2): Burke and His Critics
7 - The Bourgeoisie and the Concept of Social Revolution: From Consolidation to Abdication
SECTION TWO - Origins, Developments, Orthodoxy
8 - Marx and Engels (1) 1843–47: Between Enlightenment and Historical Materialism
9 - Marx and Engels (2) 1847–52: The Bourgeois Revolution in Theory and Practice
10 - Marx and Engels (3) after 1852: Transitions, Revolutions, and Agency
11 - Classical Marxism (1) 1889–1905: Bourgeois Revolution in the Social Democratic Worldview
12 - Classical Marxism (2) 1905–24: The Russian Crucible
13 - The Emergence of Orthodoxy: 1924–40
14 - Classical Marxism (3) 1924–40: Rethinking Bourgeois Revolution—Strategy, History, Tradition
SECTION THREE - Revisions, Reconstructions, Alternatives
15 - Revisionism: The Bourgeois Revolutions Did Not Take Place
16 - From Society to Politics; from Event to Process
17 - “The Capitalist World-System”
18 - “Capitalist Social Property Relations”
19 - “Consequentialism”
SECTION FOUR - The Specificity of the Bourgeois Revolutions
20 - Between Two Social Revolutions
21 - Preconditions for an Era of Bourgeois Revolution
22 - Patterns of Consummation
Epilogue: Reflections in a Scottish Cemetery
Bibliography
Notes
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