Social Theory and the Crisis of State Socialism |
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Author:
| Ray, Larry |
Series title: | Studies of Communism in Transition |
ISBN: | 978-1-85278-688-5 |
Publication Date: | Jan 1996 |
Publisher: | Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | AUD $182.95 |
Book Description:
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The collapse of communist governments in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union requires a major rethink of many sociological theories of social integration and change.
Drawing on a wide range of social theory, Social Theory and the Crisis of State Socialismoffers a comparative analysis of the democratic revolutions, combining historical understanding with accounts of the crisis of communism in Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland and Russia. Larry Ray identifies contradictions within...
More Description
The collapse of communist governments in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union requires a major rethink of many sociological theories of social integration and change.
Drawing on a wide range of social theory, Social Theory and the Crisis of State Socialismoffers a comparative analysis of the democratic revolutions, combining historical understanding with accounts of the crisis of communism in Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland and Russia. Larry Ray identifies contradictions within Soviet societies, developing a theory of crisis management that accounts both for the survival of the system over several decades and for its eventual failure.
The social structure of Soviet systems is analysed in relation to debates in sociological theory over legitimation, social integration, social movements and modernity. Larry Ray examines new forms of class, political and national identity in post-socialist Europe, demonstrating how political conflicts are related to economic transformation, especially the emergence of 'nomenklatura capitalism', and asks whether sufficient conditions exist for the stabilization of democratic citizenship.
Social Theory and the Crisis of State Socialismwill be welcomed for comparatively analysing the communist and post-communist experiences of a number of East European countries in the light of a critical examination of the broad issues of social theory and modernity.