Results for 'Social Revolutionary'

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  1. Gandhi as a social revolutionary.Wilfred Wellock - 1953 - Tirupur, South India,: Sarvodaya Prachuralayam.
  2.  8
    Revolutionary Routines: The Habits of Social Transformation.Carolyn Pedwell - 2021 - McGill-Queen's University Press.
    Although we tend to associate social transformation with major events, historical turning points, or revolutionary upheaval, Revolutionary Routines argues that seemingly minor everyday habits are the key to meaningful change. Through its account of influential socio-political processes – such as the resurgence of fascism and white supremacy, the crafting of new technologies of governance, and the operation of digital media and algorithms – this book rethinks not only how change works, but also what counts as change. Drawing (...)
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  3. Social Work as Revolutionary Praxis? The contribution to critical practice of Cornelius Castoriadis’s political philosophy.Phillip Ablett & Christine Morley - 2019 - Critical and Radical Social Work 7 (3): 333-348.
    Social work is a contested tradition, torn between the demands of social governance and autonomy. Today, this struggle is reflected in the division between the dominant, neoliberal agenda of service provision and the resistance offered by various critical perspectives employed by disparate groups of practitioners serving diverse communities. Critical social work challenges oppressive conditions and discourses, in addition to addressing their consequences in individuals’ lives. However, very few recent critical theorists informing critical social work have advocated (...)
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  4. Revolutionary Neighbor-Love: Kierkegaard, Marx, and Social Reform.Richard Eva & C. Stephen Evans - 2021 - International Journal on Humanistic Ideology 11 (1):199-218.
    In this paper we compare Kierkegaard’s and Marx’s views on social reform. Then we argue that Kierkegaard’s own reasoning is consistent with the expression of neighbor-love through collective action, i.e. social reform. However, Kierkegaard’s approach to social reform would be vastly different than Marx’s. We end by reviewing several questions that Kierkegaardian social reformers would ask themselves. Our hope is that this exploration will provide helpful insights into how those who genuinely love their neighbors ought to (...)
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  5.  3
    Christian social ethics in a revolutionary age.Carl-Henric Grenholm - 1973 - Uppsala: [printed by Tofters tryckeri].
  6.  10
    Social Conflict in the Era of Detente: New Roles for Ideologues, Revolutionaries, and Youth.Arthur Vidich - 1975 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 42.
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  7.  2
    Some Social and Political Ideas of the Revolutionary Era. [REVIEW]C. R. Mcrae - 1931 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 9 (3):230.
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  8.  11
    Book Review: Foundations of Social Ecological Economics: The Fight for Revolutionary Change in Economic Thought. [REVIEW]Arild Vatn - 2024 - Environmental Values 33 (2):246-249.
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  9.  64
    Revolutionary outcomes in Iran and Nicaragua: Coalition fragmentation, war, and the limits of social transformation. [REVIEW]John Foran & Jeff Goodwin - 1993 - Theory and Society 22 (2):209-247.
  10. The historical imaginary of social science in post-Revolutionary France: Bonald, Saint-Simon, Comte.W. Jay Reedy - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (1):1-26.
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  11. Paula Allman, Revolutionary Social Transformation: Democratic Hopes, Political Possibilities and Critical Education Reviewed by.Stella Gaon - 2000 - Philosophy in Review 20 (3):159-160.
     
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  12.  2
    The Pre-Revolutionary Influence of Rousseau's Contrat Social.Durand Echeverria - 1972 - Journal of the History of Ideas 33 (4):543.
  13. Bentham as Revolutionary Social Scientist.Douglas G. Long - 1987 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 6:115-145.
     
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  14.  15
    The counter revolutionary function of the social sciences in advanced industrial societies: A post revolutionary analysis and a revolutionary alternative.H. T. Wilson - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):467-477.
  15. Revolutionary Hope: Essays in Honor of William L. McBride.Nathan J. Jun & Shane Wahl (eds.) - 2013 - Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
    Over the course of the last four decades, William Leon McBride has distinguished himself as one of the most esteemed and accomplished philosophers of his generation. This volume—which celebrates the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday—includes contributions from colleagues, friends, and formers students and pays tribute to McBride’s considerable achievements as a teacher, mentor, and scholar.
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  16.  7
    Revolutionary Love: A Political Manifesto to Heal and Transform the World.Michael Lerner - 2019 - University of California Press.
    From social theorist and psychotherapist Rabbi Michael Lerner comes a strategy for a new socialism built on love, kindness, and compassion for one another. _Revolutionary Love_ proposes a method to replace what Lerner terms the "capitalist globalization of selfishness" with a globalization of generosity, prophetic empathy, and environmental sanity. Lerner challenges liberal and progressive forces to move beyond often weak-kneed and visionless politics to build instead a movement that can reverse the environmental destructiveness and social injustice caused by (...)
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  17.  28
    Caring Revolutionary Transformation: Combined Effects of a Universal Basic Income and a Public Model of Care.Zuzana Uhde - 2018 - Basic Income Studies 13 (2).
    This paper explores the possibilities of the recognition and valuation of care by implementing an unconditional basic income and presents a feminist redefinition of the concept of a UBI. The author proposes the notion of a caring revolutionary transformation as a process of institutionalising the social and economic conditions for recognition of care which is a cornerstone of struggles for women’s emancipation and gender equity. It is a process of practically realisable transformative steps which together with their combined (...)
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  18.  59
    Review of Revolutionary Parks. Conservation, Social Justice, and Mexico's National Parks, 1910-1940. [REVIEW]Alejandro Velázquez - 2013 - Studies in Social Justice 7 (1):169-171.
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  19.  8
    Return On Influence: The Revolutionary Power of Klout, Social Scoring, and Influence Marketing. Mark W. Schaefer. New York: McGraw Hill, 2012. 224 pp. $25.00. [REVIEW]Max Meng - 2015 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 51 (4):341-342.
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  20.  11
    Revolutionary changes in understanding man and society: scopes and limits.Johann Götschl (ed.) - 1995 - Boston.: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    Revolutionary Changes in Understanding Man and Society provides a fascinating analysis of these new trends which lead into the 21st Century, together with a ...
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  21.  25
    Revolutionary Doctrines and Political Imaginaries: American Modernities in the Republican Age.Jeremy Smith - 2012 - Critical Horizons 13 (1):52 - 73.
    The social thought of Castoriadis and Lefort address Old World constellations. Yet both are positioned in a critical relationship to the Enlightenment and Romanticism, and pose questions about power, the political and citizenship relevant to different civilizational settings. Two political philosophies that emerged in the era of revolutionary critique are examined in this paper alongside Castoriadis and Lefort. Thomas Jefferson’s philosophy of republic and empire and Simon Bolivar’s creed of independence were American visions that connected with the political (...)
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  22.  8
    Russian revolutionary terrorism, British liberals, and the problem of empire (1884–1914).Lara Green - 2020 - History of European Ideas 46 (5):633-648.
    Britain in the fin de siècle was home to many significant communities of political émigrés. Among Russian revolutionaries who made London their home were Sergei Stepniak and Feliks Volkhovskii, forced to flee Russia as a result of their revolutionary activities in the 1870s. Britain became a symbol of liberty in their writings as a source of comparison with tsarist rule. These comparisons also supported their justifications of the use of terrorism by Russian revolutionaries when writing for audiences with concerns (...)
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  23. A Revolutionary New Metaphysics, Based on Consciousness, and a Call to All Philosophers.Lorna Green - manuscript
    June 2022 A Revolutionary New Metaphysics, Based on Consciousness, and a Call to All Philosophers We are in a unique moment of our history unlike any previous moment ever. Virtually all human economies are based on the destruction of the Earth, and we are now at a place in our history where we can foresee if we continue on as we are, our own extinction. As I write, the planet is in deep trouble, heat, fires, great storms, and record (...)
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  24. Informal and revolutionary feminist placemaking.Asma Mehan - 2024 - Frontiers in Sociology 9 (Sec. Gender, Sex and Sexualities):01-09.
    Urban spaces, often emerging outside formal, recognized boundaries, underscore the pivotal role women play in shaping these environments. Despite the enduring influence of patriarchal and hierarchical structures that render these spaces overtly gendered, it is within these contexts that women’s actions become particularly transformative. Drawing from feminist urban theories of the global south, this paper investigates informal placemaking, feminist urban activism, revolutionary placemaking, online protest movements, and the networks that support women’s solidarity groups. Employing a mixed-methods approach that includes (...)
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  25. Our Fundamental Problem: A Revolutionary Approach to Philosophy.Nicholas Maxwell - 2020 - Montreal, Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press.
    How can the world we live in and see, touch, hear, and smell, the world of living things, people, consciousness, free will, meaning, and value - how can all of this exist and flourish embedded as it is in the physical universe, made up of nothing but physical entities such as electrons and quarks? How can anything be of value if everything in the universe is, ultimately, just physics? In Our Fundamental Problem Nicholas Maxwell argues that this problem of reconciling (...)
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  26.  14
    On Revolutionary Democracy—Its State and Political System.R. A. Ul'ianovskii - 1984 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 23 (3):50-67.
    In recent years much has been written about the contemporary revolutionary democracy of Afro-Asian countries, particularly in connection with the new experience of noncapitalist development or socialist orientation. Serious study of the revolutionary process in former colonial and semicolonial countries would be inconceivable without the formulation of this problem. Under the conditions of the general crisis of capitalism and the growing influence of scientific socialism, conceptions of the departure from capitalism, of the adoption of a non-capitalist path of (...)
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    Revolutionary China and Its Late-Capitalist Fate.Christopher Connery - 2015 - Historical Materialism 23 (2):257-286.
    This essay examines several works that contribute to an understanding of the nature of contemporary Chinese capitalism and its historical development. Core issues include the character of the bureaucracy, which has had a distinctive relationship to capital formation, and the character of the working class. The periodisation of Chinese capitalism and the relation between the pre- and post-reform periods are pressing political and analytical concerns. This essay suggests the advantages of a clearer focus on the dynamics of depoliticisation in understanding (...)
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  28. Revolutionary praxis and the future of philosophy.Andrew Cooper - 2009 - Emergent Australasian Philosophers 2 (1).
    The modern world is characterised by the juxtaposing forces of hope in unlimited expansion on the one hand, and scepticism at the state of the world on the other. Society is in many ways in a state of distrust, uncertain of how to exist in an inherited world of opportunity and turmoil, optimism and confusion. As the rationality of the economy and its ability to fairly distribute resources is being called into question in current times, technological development in the service (...)
     
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  29. The Revolutionary Ecological Legacy of Herbert Marcuse.Charles Reitz - 2022 - Cantley, Quebec, Canada: Daraja Press.
    Marcuse argued that U.S.-led globalized capitalism represented the irrational perfection of waste and the degradation of the earth, resurgent sexism, racism, bigoted nationalism, and warlike patriotism. Inspired by the revolutionary legacy of Herbert Marcuse’s social and political philosophy, this volume appeals to the energies of those engaged in a wide range of contemporary social justice struggles: ecosocialism, antiracism, the women’s movement, LGBTQ rights, and antiwar forces. The intensification of these regressive political tendencies today must be countered, and (...)
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  30.  20
    Making Revolutionary Fire.Genevieve B. Ritchie - 2017 - Historical Materialism 25 (4):241-256.
    The edited collectionMarxism and Feminismtraces both the conceptual divides and political affinities between feminism and Marxism. Utilising a keywords-, or core-concepts approach, the book fleshes out the tensions and contradictions that organise and orient Marxist and feminist theories and practices of social transformation. The concepts discussed inMarxism and Feminismdo not try to bridge divergent theories of exploitation or oppression; rather the tensions between feminism and Marxism are used to generate new terrains of investigation. Although the topics discussed vary widely, (...)
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  31.  12
    Revolutionary technologies: Praxical Time as a Way of Overcoming Reification.Roisin Lally - 2011 - Presenting EPIS 4.
    This article argues that by recognizing the fundamental relationship between praxical time and dwelling as a matrix of interweaving modes of being, society can subvert the potential reification of humanity by technology. This can only be achieved through a democratic process that involves participatory agents not only at the design level but also in the event of naming future innovations. By looking at the work of Alain Badiou, it is shown how a fusion of Heideggerian-inspired phenomenology and speculative ontology is (...)
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  32.  64
    Revolutionary Becomings: Negritude's Anti-Humanist Humanism.Valentine Moulard-Leonard - 2005 - Human Studies 28 (3):231-249.
    In this paper I establish an alliance between the thought of Frantz Fanon and Gilles Deleuze's Philosophy of Difference. In light of Fanon's critique of Sartre's characterization of the place of the Negritude movement in terms of dialectic, I point to the inherent limitations of modern humanism's dialectical accounts for enabling genuine historical change. Alternatively, I appeal to Deleuze's distinction between history and becoming, and his concomitant idea of intensive becoming-revolutionary. I conclude that such an alliance with Deleuzian metaphysics (...)
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  33. Revolutionary thought.Nicholas Maxwell - 2014 - Times Higher Education (2136):30.
    The crisis of our times is that we have science without wisdom. Modern science and technology lead to modern industry and agriculture which in turn lead to all the great benefits of the modern world and to the global crises we face, from population growth to climate change. The fault lies, not with science, but with science dissociated from a more fundamental concern with problems of living. We urgently need to bring about a revolution in academia so that the fundamental (...)
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  34.  8
    Revolutionary electricity in 1790: shock, consensus, and the birth of a political metaphor.Samantha Wesner - 2021 - British Journal for the History of Science 54 (3):257-275.
    The 1790 Fête de la fédération in the early French Revolution evoked the memory of the taking of the Bastille while tamping down on the simmering social forces that had erupted on 14 July 1789. How to do both? As an official architect put it, through the festival, ‘the sentiment of each becomes the sentiment of all by a kind of electrification, against which even the most perverse men cannot defend themselves’. This paper argues that a new language of (...)
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  35.  16
    Revolutionary Nondualism.Sanjay Lal - 2019 - The Acorn 19 (2):131-148.
    Among those who have worked for uplifting the poor, Mahatma Gandhi occupies a unique place. Although his reform efforts received ample financial support from well-off benefactors, Gandhi’s personal life exemplified ideals of voluntary poverty and renouncement. On Martha Nussbaum’s account of stoicism, Gandhi’s voluntary renouncement may imply morally unacceptable reasoning regarding nonviolence and the plight of the poor. Nussbaum argues that the stoic disparagement of external things of fortune implies that they cannot coherently oppose external harms such as torture or (...)
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  36.  3
    The De-Eroticization of Women's Liberation: Social Purity Movements and the Revolutionary Feminism of Sheila Jeffreys.Margaret Hunt - 1990 - Feminist Review 34 (1):23-46.
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  37. The Revolutionary Army.Zou Rong - 1999 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 31 (1):32-38.
    Zou Rong received a classical education but, uninterested in an official career and frustrated by the irrelevance of his schooling to the day's issues, traveled to Japan in 1901 to further his studies. There he wrote The Revolutionary Army, which was published in Shanghai after his return to China in 1903. The Revolutionary Army, which was scathingly critical of the Manchu rulers of China, enraged government authorities who sought his immediate arrest. Zou was protected by authorities of the (...)
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  38.  7
    Revolutionary Marriage: On the Politics of Sexual Stories in Naxalbari.Srila Roy - 2006 - Feminist Review 83 (1):99-118.
    Marriage practices, the dynamics of interpersonal relationships and the politics of sexuality are relatively under-researched themes in the study of Bengali communism. Historical scholarship on the revolutionary politics of the extreme left Naxalbari andolan of the late 1960s–1970s, the object of this piece of study, is no exception. The article engages with women and men's narratives on the practice of ‘revolutionary’ marriage in the movement through the prism of contemporary popular memory studies and narrative analysis. Drawing on field (...)
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  39. Historical narrative, mundane political time, and revolutionary moments : coexisting temporalities in the lived experience of social movements.Sian Lazar - 2014 - In Laura Bear (ed.), Doubt, conflict, mediation: the anthropology of modern time. Malden, MA: Wiley.
     
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  40.  12
    Marx and Engels on French Social Democracy: Historians or Revolutionaries?Bernard H. Moss - 1985 - Journal of the History of Ideas 46 (4):539.
  41.  39
    Revolutionary Writing, Moral Philosophy, and Universal Benevolence in the Eighteenth Century.Evan Radcliffe - 1993 - Journal of the History of Ideas 54 (2):221.
    Of all the Enlightenment questions reopened in Britain by the French Revolution, none was more hotly debated and none became more politically charged than universal benevolence -the ideathat benevolence and sympathy can be extended to all humanity. Inthe British controversy overthe Revolution, issues that had been argued by eighteenth-century moral philosophers surfaced not only with a new urgency but also with a fresh sense of possible political and social implications; taking a stance on universal benevolence quickly came to imply (...)
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  42.  42
    Revolutionary Terrorism, Crime and Morality.Robert Young - 1977 - Social Theory and Practice 4 (3):287-302.
  43.  8
    Revolutionary Horror.Kelly Oliver - 1989 - Social Theory and Practice 15 (3):305-320.
  44.  17
    Revolutionary Horror.Kelly Oliver - 1989 - Social Theory and Practice 15 (3):305-320.
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  45.  22
    Revolutionary Spacing: An Arendtian Recognitive Politics.Yasemin Sari - 2015 - Dissertation, University of Alberta
    In this dissertation, I undertake a critical analysis of the conception of community at work in what is termed “identity-based politics.” Working with Hannah Arendt’s implicit argument about place and visibility, I develop a theory of recognition in order to rethink the nature of community. The ultimate aim of my project develops a recognitive politics, a two-tiered theory of recognition, which takes into account social identities as the condition of possibility for the free political action that so animated Arendt. (...)
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  46.  85
    Introduction to "Revolutionary Hope: Essays in Honor of William L. McBride".Nathan Jun & Shane Wahl - 2013 - In Nathan J. Jun & William Leon McBride (eds.), Revolutionary hope: essays in honor of William L. McBride. Lanham: Lexington Books. pp. 1-6.
  47.  21
    Revolutionary constitutionalism: Some thoughts on Laurie Ackermann's jurisprudence.Roger Berkowitz - unknown
    This paper looks to Hannah Arendt's thinking about freedom and revolution to shed light on the "revolutionary jurisprudence" of South African Constitutional Court Justice Laurie Ackermann. As Arendt understands it, revolution is the coincidence of the idea of freedom and the experience of a new beginning. Arendt insists that only a government that harbors the revolutionary spirit can secure a stable space for freedom in the modern world. In asking what institutional spaces of exist that might preserve a (...)
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  48.  4
    Counter-revolutionary in Revolutionary Times?Deng Yinghao - 2022 - Philosophy and Global Affairs 2 (1):47-68.
    This article addresses two related questions: how do we read He-Yin Zhen’s political writing in relation to her broader political life and how should her political ideas be introduced to the English-speaking academy? I first concur with recent translators of He-Yin, Lydia Liu, Dorothy Ko, and Rebecca Karl, that He-Yin’s anarcho-feminism marks a significant moment in the modern Chinese history of political ideas and can potentially contribute to transnational feminist theories. Following this, I revisit and reconstruct He-Yin and her life (...)
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    Reflections on the revolutionary wave in 2011.Colin J. Beck - 2014 - Theory and Society 43 (2):197-223.
    The “Arab Spring” was a surprising event not just because predicting revolutions is a difficult task, but because current theories of revolution are ill equipped to explain revolutionary waves where interactive causal mechanisms at different levels of analysis and interactions between the units of analysis predominate. To account for such dynamics, a multidimensional social science of revolution is required. Accordingly, a meta-framework for revolutionary theory that combines multiple levels of analysis, multiple units of analysis, and their interactions (...)
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  50.  31
    No Revolutionary Decolonization without Creolization.Drucilla Cornell - 2018 - CLR James Journal 24 (1):273-278.
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