Revolutions Rewired: Comparative Histories of Political Upheaval
MTA
A comparative study of major revolutions — French, American, Chinese, Russian, and decolonization movements — that maps causes, strategies, and outcomes
2nd Edition
*Revolutions Rewired: Comparative Histories of Political Upheaval* offers a comprehensive and analytical exploration of the mechanisms that drive, sustain, and derail major political transformations. By synthesizing the histories of the American, French, Russian, and Chinese revolutions alongside the global waves of decolonization, this study moves beyond simple narrative to map the underlying patterns of upheaval. It examines the "tinder" of structural grievances—such as fiscal crises, extreme inequality, and state erosion—and the "sparks" of human agency, intellectual ferment, and technological shifts that ignite mass mobilization.
The book provides a rigorous comparative framework, investigating how ideas like Enlightenment liberalism, Marxism, and anti-colonial nationalism provide the blueprints for new orders, while also exploring the practical challenges of revolutionary strategy, from clandestine party networks to guerrilla warfare. It delves into the often-violent aftermath of revolution, analyzing the complex processes of constitutional design, the politics of memory and justice, and the shifting dynamics of gender, race, and ethnicity in the founding of new states.
Moving into the modern era, the text concludes by examining how digital networks and social media have "rewired" contemporary activism. This analysis demonstrates that while the tools of mobilization have evolved from pamphlets to hashtags, the fundamental struggles over power, legitimacy, and sovereignty remain deeply rooted in historical patterns. *Revolutions Rewired* is an essential resource for students, scholars, and anyone seeking to understand why some revolutions deliver on their promise of liberation while others succumb to counterrevolution, stagnation, or new forms of authoritarianism.
This book is designed for students of political science and history, researchers seeking a comparative framework for social movements, and activists looking for strategic lessons on mobilization and institutional design. It is particularly beneficial for readers interested in how historical patterns of upheaval inform contemporary digital activism and modern state-building. Anyone seeking to understand the recurring lifecycle of political regimes—from collapse to the founding of new orders—will find this text essential.
January 1, 2026
49,580 words
3 hours 28 minutes
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