Social and political movements/ edited by Cyrus Zirakzadeh Ernesto

Contributor(s): Ernesto, Cyrus Zirakzadeh. (ed)Material type: TextTextPublication details: London: SAGE, 2011Description: V. 1, xxix,392 pISBN: 9780857020918Subject(s): Political participation Social movements Popular culture--Political aspects Social movements--Political aspects Globalization--Political aspects Globalization--Social aspectsDDC classification: 320.5
Contents:
VOLUME 1: THEORIZING ABOUT MOVEMENTS AFTER WORLD WAR II Editor's Introduction to the Overall Handbook Editor's Introduction to Volume 1 Section 1: Mass-Society Theories Life Cycles of Social Movements The Revolutionary Process: A frame of reference for the study of revolutionary movements Rex Hooper Totalitarian Movements and the Loneliness of the Bourgeoisie The Origins of Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt Class Insecurity versus Status Insecurity The Radical Right: A Problem for American Democracy Seymour Martin Lipset Modernity and Anger Fascism and Modernization Henry Ashby Turner, Jr. Section 2: Marxist Visions Purposefulness of Resistance Concept of Class and the Roots of Fascism The Lower Middle Class as Historical Problem Arno Mayer Role of Movements in Class Formation Proletariat into a Class: The process of class formation from Karl Kautsky's The Class Struggle to Recent Controversies Adam Przeworski Dangers of Political Incorporation Retrospective Comments Francis Fox Piven Section 3: Peasant Movements as a Theoretical Puzzle Alternatives to Movement Activism Hegemony and the Peasantry James Scott Instrumental Reasoning and Tactical Choices The Rational Peasant: The political economy of rural society Samuel Popkin Regime Changes and Shifts in Peasant Politics From Avoidance to Confrontation: Peasant protest in precolonial and colonial Southeast Asia Michael Adas Section 4: Speculations about New Social Movements Uncovering a New Style of Movement Experience New Social Movements J rgen Habermas Analyzing a New Phenomenon The 'New Social Movements': Moral crusades, political pressure groups, or social movements Klaus Elder Are New Social Movements Truly New? 'New Social Movements' of the Early Nineteenth Century Craig CalhounDunleavy, and Mary Bernstein Noticing Indirect Effects
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Books Reference Books Central Library, Sikkim University
Reference
Reference Collection 320.5 ERN/S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan P26482
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VOLUME 1: THEORIZING ABOUT MOVEMENTS AFTER WORLD WAR II Editor's Introduction to the Overall Handbook Editor's Introduction to Volume 1 Section 1: Mass-Society Theories Life Cycles of Social Movements The Revolutionary Process: A frame of reference for the study of revolutionary movements Rex Hooper Totalitarian Movements and the Loneliness of the Bourgeoisie The Origins of Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt Class Insecurity versus Status Insecurity The Radical Right: A Problem for American Democracy Seymour Martin Lipset Modernity and Anger Fascism and Modernization Henry Ashby Turner, Jr.
Section 2: Marxist Visions Purposefulness of Resistance Concept of Class and the Roots of Fascism The Lower Middle Class as Historical Problem Arno Mayer Role of Movements in Class Formation Proletariat into a Class: The process of class formation from Karl Kautsky's The Class Struggle to Recent Controversies Adam Przeworski Dangers of Political Incorporation Retrospective Comments Francis Fox Piven
Section 3: Peasant Movements as a Theoretical Puzzle Alternatives to Movement Activism Hegemony and the Peasantry James Scott Instrumental Reasoning and Tactical Choices The Rational Peasant: The political economy of rural society Samuel Popkin Regime Changes and Shifts in Peasant Politics From Avoidance to Confrontation: Peasant protest in precolonial and colonial Southeast Asia Michael Adas
Section 4: Speculations about New Social Movements Uncovering a New Style of Movement Experience New Social Movements J rgen Habermas Analyzing a New Phenomenon The 'New Social Movements': Moral crusades, political pressure groups, or social movements Klaus Elder Are New Social Movements Truly New? 'New Social Movements' of the Early Nineteenth Century Craig CalhounDunleavy, and Mary Bernstein Noticing Indirect Effects

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