Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World"A landmark in comparative history and a challenge to scholars of all lands who are trying to learn how we arrived at where we are now."--New York Times Book Review |
Contents
England and the Contributions of Violence | 3 |
Evolution and Revolution in France | 40 |
The Peasants Relationship to Radicalism during | 70 |
Copyright | |
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Agrarian Origins agriculture American ancien régime areas aristocracy bourgeois bourgeoisie British bureaucracy capitalism capitalist caste changes chap China Chinese Chōshū Civil commercial Communists Confucian counterrevolution countryside cultivation daimyō democracy democratic discussion economic economic surplus eighteenth century élite enclosures England English evidence fact farmers farming fascism feudal forces France French French Revolution gentry Germany historians Imperial important India industrial Japan Japanese Kuomintang labor landed aristocracy landed upper classes landlords Lefebvre mainly Meiji ment merchants modern Mogul Moreland movement Nien Rebellion nineteenth century nobility nomic notion parliamentary parliamentary democracy peas peasant revolution peasant society peasantry percent plantation political population problem produce radical reactionary rebellion reform repressive revolutionary royal rulers rural Russia samurai sans-culottes seems sharecropping situation slavery social structure statistical strong substantial surplus tenants tion Tokugawa took towns traditional urban Vendée village Western zamindars