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TZID:Eastern Standard Time
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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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TZNAME:Eastern Standard Time
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DTSTART:20250301T020000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DESCRIPTION:The ‘Cosmic Revolution’: The Mexican Revolution (1910-2010) in 
 Comparative Global Perspective This year\, the Mexican Revolution turns on
 e hundred. Among the many possible perspectives on this major event\, one 
 is outward-looking\, global and comparative. This lecture\, involving a br
 eakdown of the main sociopolitical components of the Mexican Revolution (1
 910-40)\, evaluates it in light of other major world revolutions\, arguing
  (against some revisionist theses) that it belongs in this rare category (
 it is\, in other words\, a ‘real’ ‘social’ revolution)\; and that\, withou
 t being a simple carbon-copy\, it bears comparison with discernible elemen
 ts of contrasting revolutions - including ‘bourgeois’ revolutions\, like t
 he French\; ‘socialist’ revolutions like the Russian\, Chinese and Cuban\;
  and ‘nationalist’ revolutions (all of the above\, and more).
DTEND:20101210T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T125745Z
DTSTART:20101210T210000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:PLACA presents: Alan Knight
UID:RFCALITEM639093346653419171
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The ‘Cosmic Revolution’: The Mexican Revolutio
 n (1910-2010) in Comparative Global Perspective This year\, the Mexican Re
 volution turns one hundred. Among the many possible perspectives on this m
 ajor event\, one is outward-looking\, global and comparative. This lecture
 \, involving a breakdown of the main sociopolitical components of the Mexi
 can Revolution (1910-40)\, evaluates it in light of other major world revo
 lutions\, arguing (against some revisionist theses) that it belongs in thi
 s rare category (it is\, in other words\, a ‘real’ ‘social’ revolution)\; 
 and that\, without being a simple carbon-copy\, it bears comparison with d
 iscernible elements of contrasting revolutions - including ‘bourgeois’ rev
 olutions\, like the French\; ‘socialist’ revolutions like the Russian\, Ch
 inese and Cuban\; and ‘nationalist’ revolutions (all of the above\, and mo
 re).
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