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Throughout the modern age, revolutions have spread across state borders, engulfing entire regions, continents, and, at times, the globe. Revolutionary World examines the spread of upheavals during the major revolutionary moments in modern history: the Atlantic Revolutions, Europe's 1848 revolts, the commune movement of the 1870s, the 1905-15 upheavals in Asia, the communist revolutions around 1917, the 'Wilsonian' uprisings of 1919, the 'Third World' revolutions, the global Islamic revolt of 1978-79, the events of 1989, and the rise and fall of the 'Arab Spring'. The chapters explore the nature of these revolutionary waves, tracing the exchange of radical ideas and the movements of revolutionaries around the world. Bringing together a group of distinguished historians, Revolutionary World shows that the major revolutions of the modern age, which have so often been studied as isolated national or imperial events, were almost never contained within state borders and were usually part of broader revolutionary moments.
David Motadel is Associate Professor of International History at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He is the author of Islam and Nazi Germany's War (2014), which was awarded the Fraenkel Prize, and the editor of Islam and the European Empires (2014). In 2018, he received the Philip Leverhulme Prize for History.
Acknowledgements; List of Figures; List of Contributor; Introduction; Global Revolution David Motadel; 1. The Atlantic Revolutions David A. Bell; 2. The Revolutionary Waves of 1848 Christopher Clark; 3. The World of the Paris Commune Quentin Deluermoz; 4. The Global Wave of Constitutional Revolutions 1905–1915 Charles Kurzman; 5. The Global Red Revolution Rachel G. Hoffman; 6. The Wilsonian Uprisings of 1919 Erez Manela; 7. The Third World Revolutions Odd Arne Westad; 8. The Global Islamic Revolution Abbas Amana; 9. The Anticommunist Revolts of 1989 John Connelly; 10. The Arab Uprisings James Gelvin; Afterword: Islands of Global Revolution Anne Eller; Index.
'Successive waves of revolutions formed the modern world, but world history has strikingly failed to treat those revolutions comprehensively – until now. This rich collection illuminatingly surveys the world of revolutions from the late eighteenth century to the Arab Spring. It should set the global history of revolutions on a new path by raising as many fertile questions as it answers: a major achievement.' David Armitage, author of Civil Wars: A History in Ideas
H. E. Chehabi, David Motadel, Boston University) Chehabi, H. E. (Professor of International Relations and History Emeritus, Professor of International Relations and History Emeritus, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)) Motadel, David (Associate Professor of International History, Associate Professor of International History, H E Chehabi