In the aftermath
of World War II, revolutions
upset a surprisingly large
number of poor countries, among
them Vietnam, China, Cuba,
Algeria, Ethiopia, Cambodia,
Mozambique, Angola, Afghanistan,
Iran, and Nicaragua. Revolutionaries
in these geographically and
culturally disparate countries
came to power through different
routes, but once in power they
had remarkably similar ideas
about how to remake their states
and societies. In this passionate
analysis of the course of these
revolutions, Forrest Colburn
suggests that shared institutional
and policy choices of revolutionary
elites arose from a fashionable
political imagination. Paradoxically,
in an era marked by the demise
of European colonialism, it
was Europeans - mainly Marx,
Engels, and Lenin - who supplied
the vision of what could replace
colonialism. Colburn traces
the diffusion of this intoxicating
political imagination not to
the Soviet Union, but instead
to Western Europe and North
America, where socialism was
rarely more than political
fantasy. In Latin America,
the Middle East, Africa, and
Asia, this imagination inspired
revolution, but more importantly
led to sadly flawed ideas about
how to eliminate poverty and
inequality. The vogue for revolution
in poor countries withered
away in a descent accelerated,
but not initiated, by the East
European events of 1989-1991.
This lucid book clarifies why
so many countries were so profoundly
wrecked in the frenzied pursuit
of a dreamt-up world.
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