ABSTRACT

Like many other specialized but historically central topics within the social sciences, the study of revolutions has not proven immune to changes in the larger currents within social theory generally. This means that since the early 1980s, and with increasing urgency in the early 1990s, the “cultural” turn within the social sciences has begun to have an impact on theorizing about revolutions. This turn constitutes a critical new moment in the actual study of revolutions, one potentially capable of affecting our thinking on a par with the previous “turn” toward structural theories in the 1970s associated with the work of Theda Skocpol, Jeffery Paige, and Charles Tilly, among others, and just before them, Eric Wolf and Barrington Moore, Jr. This development has paralleled and been affected by the rise of the sociology of culture in the United States, cultural studies in England, and post-structuralism in France and elsewhere. The purpose of this chapter is to take some stock of the many diverse currents within this most recent approach as applied to revolutions, establishing their historical lineages and identifying the major debates among them, and to set out a new research agenda for incorporating the undeniable insights of this body of work into future, better-rounded perspectives for studying revolutions.