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88 Pol. Sci. Q. 1 (1973)

handle is hein.journals/pclscceqry88 and id is 1 raw text is: 









               The Social Origins

               of  the   American Revolution: An

               Evaluation and an Interpretation*









                                              JACK P. GREENE
                                     The Johns  Hopkins  University

              Given  the rich theoretical literature on revolution that
has  been published  over the last decade with  its heavy emphasis
on  the relationship between revolutions and  the social systems in
which  they occur,' it is hardly surprising that historians of mod-
em  political revolutions have  increasingly turned their attention
to the wider  social context in their search for an explanation for
those events or that their discussions of the causal pattern of rev-
olutions now  give as much  attention to social strain as to political
and  ideological conflict; to social dysfunction, frustration, anomie,
and  their indices as to weaknesses and  tensions within the  polit-
  * An earlier version of this paper was presented at San Diego State
College and San Jose State College on March 20 and 21, 1972 as the sec-
ond  annual lecture of the The California State University and Colleges
Statewide Lecture Series to Honor the Bicentennial of the American Rev-
olution.
  ' Especially Chalmers Johnson, Revolutionary Change (Boston, 1966).
But see also Neil J. Smelser, Theory of Collective Behavior (New York,
1962); James C. Davies, Toward a Theory of Revolution, American So-
ciological Review, XXVII (1962), 5-19; Barrington Moore Jr., Social Origins
of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the
Modern  World (Boston, 1966); Henry Bienen, Violence and Social Change
(Chicago, 1968); and Ted Robert Gurr, Why Men Rebel (Princeton, 1970).


Volume LXXXVIII Number 1 March 1973


1

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