The self-limiting revolutions of 1989 in Central Europe offer an alternative paradigm of revolutionary change that is reminiscent more of the American struggle for independence in 1776 than the Jacobin tendencies that grew out of the French Revolution of 1789. In order to understand the contradictory impulses of the revolutions of 1989 - the desire for a radical renewal and the concern for preservation - this article takes as its point of departure the political thought of Hannah Arendt and Edmund Burke.published_or_final_versio
This article re-examines Burke's doctrine of intervention by analysing his decades-long interest in ...
Evaluating 1989 has divided analysts from the outset. The majority of political scientists and socio...
Amidst the upheaval of the French Revolution, the British parliamentarian and political theorist Edm...
The article focuses on the philosophical issues surrounding the establishment of revolution as a con...
The historical meaning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and of the subsequent post-communist t...
In my thesis, I examine Aristotle’s theory of stasis and Hannah Arendt’s notion of revolutions. I ar...
International audienceIn On Revolution Hannah Arendt dealt, among other subjects, with the authentic...
This article is an attempt to rescue revolution, both as concept and practice, from the triumphalism...
This article explores several issues related to the revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe. How well ...
ABSTRACT. The events of 1989 in the East-Central European belt of satel-lite communist regimes was a...
Edição e tradução de Adriano CorreiaEdited by Adriano CorreiaThe original manuscript, dated to 1966-...
The study reviews the book You say you want a revolution? Radical idealism and its tragic consequenc...
This thesis attempts to answer the following question: Is Hannah Arendt\u27s theory of revolution un...
There are a number of reasons for thinking that the pursuit of change through revolution is fundamen...
This essay argues, contrary to the widespread beliefs that prevailed after 1989, that the experience...
This article re-examines Burke's doctrine of intervention by analysing his decades-long interest in ...
Evaluating 1989 has divided analysts from the outset. The majority of political scientists and socio...
Amidst the upheaval of the French Revolution, the British parliamentarian and political theorist Edm...
The article focuses on the philosophical issues surrounding the establishment of revolution as a con...
The historical meaning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and of the subsequent post-communist t...
In my thesis, I examine Aristotle’s theory of stasis and Hannah Arendt’s notion of revolutions. I ar...
International audienceIn On Revolution Hannah Arendt dealt, among other subjects, with the authentic...
This article is an attempt to rescue revolution, both as concept and practice, from the triumphalism...
This article explores several issues related to the revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe. How well ...
ABSTRACT. The events of 1989 in the East-Central European belt of satel-lite communist regimes was a...
Edição e tradução de Adriano CorreiaEdited by Adriano CorreiaThe original manuscript, dated to 1966-...
The study reviews the book You say you want a revolution? Radical idealism and its tragic consequenc...
This thesis attempts to answer the following question: Is Hannah Arendt\u27s theory of revolution un...
There are a number of reasons for thinking that the pursuit of change through revolution is fundamen...
This essay argues, contrary to the widespread beliefs that prevailed after 1989, that the experience...
This article re-examines Burke's doctrine of intervention by analysing his decades-long interest in ...
Evaluating 1989 has divided analysts from the outset. The majority of political scientists and socio...
Amidst the upheaval of the French Revolution, the British parliamentarian and political theorist Edm...