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Revolutions: a twenty-first-century perspective
Authors:Radhika Desai  Henry Heller
Affiliation:1. Political Studies, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, CanadaRadhika.Desai@umanitoba.ca;3. History, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Abstract:Abstract

We held the ‘Revolutions’ conference in 2017 to commemorate the Russian Revolution and redeem the actual record of revolutions in the Third World for the left. A quarter-century after the demise of the USSR, we found liberal capitalist triumphalism unwarranted. Two of the most important expectations to which it gave rise – that the world had become ‘unipolar’ and that it would enjoy a ‘peace dividend’ – remained unfulfilled. Instead, the world became multipolar and the West, led by the United States, engaged in unprecedented economic and military aggression against countries that contested its power. If this were not enough, social unrest and explosions in the First World as well as the Third underlined the relevance of revolutions. To trace their lineage, we recall capitalism’s intimate relation with revolution. It has needed revolutions to usher it into history and to usher it out. In addition to revolutions against developed capitalism, we also underline how important and necessary revolutions against nascent capitalism in various parts of the world have been. The contributions in this volume explore different parts of this lineage and vivify revolutions for our time.
Keywords:revolutions  third world  imperialism  classes and nations  Marxism  Russian Revolution
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