Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Cover Copyright Title Page Acknowledgements Contents Introduction Part I: Genealogies of Revolution
Did the English Have a Script for Revolution in the Seventeenth Century? God’s Revolutions: England, Europe, and the Concept of Revolution in the Mid-seventeenth Century Every Great Revolution Is a Civil War
Part II: Writing the Modern Revolutionary Script
Revolutionizing Revolution Constitutionalism: The Happiest Revolutionary Script From Constitutional to Permanent Revolution: 1649 and 1793 Scripting the French Revolution, Inventing the Terror: Marat’s Assassination and its Interpretations The Antislavery Script: Haiti’s Place in the Narrative of Atlantic Revolution
Part III: Rescripting the Revolution
Scripting the German Revolution: Marx and 1848 Reading and Repeating the Revolutionary Script: Revolutionary Mimicry in Nineteenth-Century France “Une Révolution Vraiment Scientifique”: Russian Terrorism, the Escape from the European Orbit, and the Invention of a New Revolutionary Paradigm Scripting the Russian Revolution
Part IV: Revolutionary Projections
You Say You Want a Revolution: Revolutionary and Reformist Scripts in China, 1894–2014 Mao’s Little Red Book: The Spiritual Atom Bomb and Its Global Fallout The Reel, Real and Hyper-Real Revolution: Scripts and Counter-Scripts in Cuban Documentary Film Writing on the Wall: 1968 as Event and Representation Scripting a Revolution: Fate or Fortuna in the 1979 Revolution in Iran The Multiple Scripts of the Arab Revolutions
Afterword Contributors Notes Index
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion