词条 | Revolution from Above (book) |
释义 |
Revolution from Above: Military Bureaucrats and Development in Japan, Turkey, Egypt, and Peru is a sociological book written by Ellen Kay Trimberger, published in 1978 by Transaction Books. Trimberger outlines several criteria for what she calls "revolution from above" and attempts to explicate this social phenomenon's emergence developed through a comparative historical analysis. Most of the book is dedicated to explaining the Meiji Restoration in Japan and the Turkish War of Independence. The theory is then extended to include the Egyptian Revolution of 1952 and Peru's 1968 coup led by Velasco. Trimberger's contribution is significant with regard to sociological theories of the state significant insofar as it departs from the Marxist conception of the state as merely a political superstructure built on an economic base. SynopsisDefinition of Revolution from AboveTrimberger outlines five characteristics which make a case a "revolution from above" (p. 3):
Notion of the stateTrimberger departs from the Marxian theories of the state as simply the political "superstructure" on top of the economic "base", or the more substantive theory of "relatively autonomy" as described by Nicos Poulantzas. Instead, Trimberger has a theory of the state in which the state is more autonomous, with its actors acting without regard to dominant class interests. Trimberger sees the state as "relatively autonomous" when military and civil bureaucrats are not recruited from dominant classes and when they do not form social and economic ties with these classes after their ascension to high office. These state bureaucrats become "dynamically autonomous" during periods of crisis, in which they take measures to destroy the existing economic and class order. They act independently of the existing class structures. Criteria for emergenceFurthermore, she outlines five criteria for the emergence of a revolution from above. The criteria are later revised to include only four after incorporating the Egyptian and Peruvian cases. The five criteria are the following (p. 41-43):
Trimberger removes the final criterion in applying the theory to the Egyptian and Peruvian cases, given that these conflicts did not need a provincial base to succeed. CriticismTrimberger's book was favorably received by revolutions scholars, who had focused so much on the "Great Revolutions" of France, Russia, and China, but had largely neglected the so-called "revolutions from above". However, like Theda Skocpol's States and Social Revolutions, scholars have raised objections regarding the status of values, meaning, and cultural to the explanation of revolution.[1][2] Another objection regards the selection and inclusion of cases: phenomena that fit under the rubric of "revolution from above" may fit more intuitively under another, more strictly delineated category.[2][3] References1. ^{{cite journal|last=Sewell Jr.|first=William H.|title=Ideologies and Social Revolutions: Reflections on the French Case|journal=Journal of Modern History|year=1985|volume=57|pages=86–96|doi=10.1086/242777}} 2. ^1 {{cite journal|last=Zamora|first=Mario|title=Review of 'Revolution from above: Military Bureaucrats and Development in Japan, Turkey, Egypt, and Peru'|journal=Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science|date=January 1979|volume=441|pages=201–202|doi=10.1177/000271627944100119}} 3. ^{{cite journal|last=Kim|first=Quee-Young|title=Review of 'Revolution from above: Military Bureaucrats and Development in Japan, Turkey, and Peru'|journal=Social Forces|date=June 1982|volume=60|issue=4|pages=1201–1203|doi=10.2307/2577894}} External links
2 : 1978 books|Books about revolutions |
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