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  2. Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolution

    "great revolution" (a revolution that transforms economic and social structures as well as political institutions, such as the French Revolution of 1789, Russian Revolution of 1917, or Islamic Revolution of Iran in 1979). [18] [19] Mark Katz identified six forms of revolution: rural revolution; urban revolution; coup d'état, e.g., Egypt, 1952

  3. Nikolay Gredeskul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolay_Gredeskul

    After graduating from the University of Kharkiv's law school, Gredeskul became a law professor (1890) and later dean of the law school there .In late 1904, with social tensions rising as Russian defeats in the Russo-Japanese War mounted, he joined other prominent Russian professors in calling for political reform and an academic union and was instrumental in founding the liberal Soyuz ...

  4. File:Lessons of the revolution (IA lessonsofrevolut00leni).pdf

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  5. Gustave Le Bon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustave_Le_Bon

    Charles-Marie Gustave Le Bon was born in Nogent-le-Rotrou, Centre-Val de Loire on 7 May 1841 to a family of Breton ancestry. At the time of Le Bon's birth, his mother, Annette Josephine Eugénic Tétiot Desmarlinais, was twenty-six and his father, Jean-Marie Charles Le Bon, was forty-one and a provincial functionary of the French government. [6]

  6. States and Social Revolutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/States_and_Social_Revolutions

    A revolution such as the French revolution also presented itself with a significant factor of power conducted with social, political, and economical conflicts. She describes the processes by which the centralized administrative and military machinery disintegrated in these countries, which made class relations vulnerable to assaults from below.

  7. Lumpenproletariat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumpenproletariat

    Herbert Marcuse, an American philosopher and sociologist of the Frankfurt School, believed that the working class in the US "having been bought up by the consumer society, has lost all class consciousness" and lay the hopes for revolution on the lumpenproletariat—the social outcasts—led by intellectuals. [50]

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  9. Revolutionary situation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutionary_situation

    In Marxist terminology, a revolutionary situation is a political situation indicative of a possibility of a revolution. The concept was introduced by Vladimir Lenin in 1913, in his article "Маёвка революционного пролетариата" [1] (Mayovka of the Revolutionary Proletariat).