__smbhome.uscs.susx.ac.uk_tjk30_Documents_untitled.pdf (156.6 kB)
Revolution
Revolutions encompass political mobilizations that attempt rapid transformations of both the nature of political authority and wider social, political, and economic structures. Although early anthropology rarely addressed such movements or programmes for change directly, in recent years longstanding anthropological insights have helped shape an emerging field of the anthropology of revolution. Ethnographers’ non state-centric approaches to studying political life have generated distinctive, and wide-ranging, insights into revolutionary movements and their attempts at social transformation. In-depth, long-term fieldwork highlights how revolutions involve not just transformations, but also continuities, contradictions, and slowly-unfolding legacies. Social life during revolution, even while experienced as exceptional and liminal, relates to political, economic, religious, and social phenomena before and after revolution. Ethnographic studies have also foregrounded contradictions and paradoxes surrounding official narratives of revolution as ordered teleology and emancipation from class-based, gendered, and racial marginalization. Finally, recent studies have foregrounded long-term legacies arising from divergent revolutionary outcomes.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
The Cambridge Encyclopedia of AnthropologyPublisher
Cambridge Encyclopedia of AnthropologyExternal DOI
Department affiliated with
- Anthropology Publications
Notes
The full reference for citation is: Wilson, A. 2019. Revolution. In The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Anthropology (eds) F. Stein, S. Lazar, M. Candea, H. Diemberger, J. Robbins, A. Sanchez & R. Stasch. http://doi.org/10.29164/19revFull text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Legacy Posted Date
2019-11-28First Open Access (FOA) Date
2019-11-28First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date
2019-11-28Usage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Licence
Exports
RefWorks
BibTeX
Ref. manager
Endnote
DataCite
NLM
DC