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Reddit mentions of The Anatomy of Revolution

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of The Anatomy of Revolution. Here are the top ones.

The Anatomy of Revolution
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Found 4 comments on The Anatomy of Revolution:

u/TheDataAngel · 8 pointsr/Overwatch

A book called The Anatomy of Revolution (Wiki, Amazon) - which examines how revolutions throughout history have played out - almost perfectly describes what is happening to the feminist and broader "social justice" movements.

Spoilers: It probably doesn't end well.

u/jmaistre · 5 pointsr/history

I'd suggest reading Anatomy of a Revolution. The author goes a bit too far with his model, but in general, he makes a convincing case that revolutions do not happen when people are really oppressed, but rather, they happen when a group as acquired latent power that is not yet formally recognized.

So in general, I think the causal chain goes the other way. People see an opportunity to gain an advantage -- Virginians wanted access to Western lands, Boston merchants wanted a continuation of low taxes and loose enforcement of the Navigation Acts -- and then they craft a narrative about how terribly oppressed they are.

Since the revolutionaries won the war, and many loyalists were driven underground or to Canada, they got to write the history books. The narrative thus was far more anti-Britain and anti-monarchist than was really warranted based on the facts of what happened.

> Also, how did the colonials expect taxation (which was low anyway) with representation to work?

From what I've gathered, they never expected representation in British Parliament to happen, that was never a serious claim and both sides knew it. What they wanted was no taxation.

> Long story short, they weren't being denied any rights that extended to anyone other than the wealthy. So why?

Some of the populist support for the revolution came because the very wealthy were allied with the British government. So for instance, in Virginia, the poorer, back-country folk were inspired by Patrick Henry's calls for democracy, and saw both the wealthy eastern elite and the British government as standing in their way.

Also, don't underestimate the ability of twenty-year old men with guns to be spoiling for a fight, and ready to listen to any silver tongued orator who inspires them go fight against a great oppressor.

I also highly recommend Albert Beveridge's The Life of John Marshall. It's a very human and three-dimensional look at the early years of the republic. He describes the early call to arms:

> Thomas Marshall's minister, Mr. Thompson, preached militant preparation; Parliament had deprived the colonists of "their just and legal rights" by acts which were "destructive of their liberties," thundered the parson; it had "overawed the inhabitants by British troops," loaded "great hardships" upon the people, and "reduced the poor to great want." The preacher exhorted his flock "as men and Christians" to help "supply the country with arms and ammunition,"
>
> When news of Concord and Lexington finally trickled through to upper Virginia, it found the men of her hills and mountains in grim readiness; and when, soon after, Henry's flaming words came to them, they were ready and eager to make those words good with their lives.






u/noxylophone · 3 pointsr/politics

That analysis is straight of Crane Brinton's The Anatomy of Revolution, which is a comparative analysis of the English, American, French, and Russian revolutions. It's considered one of the seminal works in looking at the macro structure of revolutionary politics, and does a great job of distilling the commonalities that feature in most popular revolutions (as opposed to military coups, etc.)

But really, when was the crown massacring people during the French Revolution? The Day of the Tiles barely counts, and after the calling of the Estates General the crown never really exercised much in the way of corporal power again (though various royalist groups did occasionally perpetrate violence.)

u/meekles94 · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

Old, but a good general place to start for understanding revolutions. https://www.amazon.com/Anatomy-Revolution-Crane-Brinton/dp/0394700449

Widely acclaimed scholar Theda Skocpol. Considered a must read for scholars of revolutions.
https://www.amazon.com/States-Social-Revolutions-Comparative-Analysis/dp/1107569842