Political science (the democratic route to modern society) 2 page/550
The exam draws on the following assigned texts: Barrington
Moore, �The Democratic Route to Modern Society,� Social Origins of
Dictatorship and Democracy Hannah Arendt, �Political Emancipation
of the Bourgeoisie,� Origins of Totalitarianism Alexander Motyl,
�Imperial Structures,� �Trajectories,� �Futures,� Revolutions,
nations, empires Alexander Gerschenkron, �Economic Backwardness in
Historical Perspective� Andre Gunder Frank, �A Plea for World
Systems History� Immanuel Wallerstein, The Modern World-System
Samira Haj, �Introduction,� The Making of Iraq Karl Marx,
�Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereof,� �The Working
Day,� �Machinery and Modern Industry,� Capital Karl Polanyi,
�Habitation versus Improvement,� The Great Transformation Charlie
Chaplin, Modern Times Questions Part I:
Identifications/Explications Please choose any FOUR (4) of the
following concepts, phrases, quotations, and ideas and, for each:
(1) identify a/the source (some appear in more than one text); (2)
provide its definition, meaning, reference within the text you
cite; (3) explain its significance for the text and/or for
comparative politics [? 125 words each] 2 1 �No bourgeoisie, no
democracy� 2 Landed aristocracy 3 �Imperialism is not empire
building and expansion is not conquest.� 4 Iqta� 5 �Railroads
cannot be built unless coal mines are opened up at the same time.�
6 Commodity 7 Late development 8 ��Rhodes recognized at the same
moment its inherent insanity�� 9 Revolution from above 10 Enclosure
11 World system 12 Commercialization of agriculture 13
Core/periphery 14 Timing 15 Saint Simon 16 Surplus value 17
��material relations between persons and social relations between
things� 18 ��primordial� Sunni-Shi�a schism� 19. exchange/use value
20. fictitious commodity
: The exam draws on the following assigned texts: Barrington
Moore, �The Democratic Route to Modern Society,� Social Origins of
Dictatorship and Democracy Hannah Arendt, �Political Emancipation
of the Bourgeoisie,� Origins of Totalitarianism Alexander Motyl,
�Imperial Structures,� �Trajectories,� �Futures,� Revolutions,
nations, empires Alexander Gerschenkron, �Economic Backwardness in
Historical Perspective� Andre Gunder Frank, �A Plea for World
Systems History� Immanuel Wallerstein, The Modern World-System
Samira Haj, �Introduction,� The Making of Iraq Karl Marx,
�Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereof,� �The Working
Day,� �Machinery and Modern Industry,� Capital Karl Polanyi,
�Habitation versus Improvement,� The Great Transformation Charlie
Chaplin, Modern Times Questions Part I:
Identifications/Explications Please choose any FOUR (4) of the
following concepts, phrases, quotations, and ideas and, for each:
(1) identify a/the source (some appear in more than one text); (2)
provide its definition, meaning, reference within the text you
cite; (3) explain its significance for the text and/or for
comparative politics [? 125 words each] 2 1 �No bourgeoisie, no
democracy� 2 Landed aristocracy 3 �Imperialism is not empire
building and expansion is not conquest.� 4 Iqta� 5 �Railroads
cannot be built unless coal mines are opened up at the same time.�
6 Commodity 7 Late development 8 ��Rhodes recognized at the same
moment its inherent insanity�� 9 Revolution from above 10 Enclosure
11 World system 12 Commercialization of agriculture 13
Core/periphery 14 Timing 15 Saint Simon 16 Surplus value 17
��material relations between persons and social relations between
things� 18 ��primordial� Sunni-Shi�a schism� 19. exchange/use value
20. fictitious commodity
Political Science
: Undergraduate
: Term Paper
: English (U.S.)
: 2 pages/550 words
:MLA












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