Synthesis of traditional and modern in the evolution of Third World societies

Bibliographic Information

Synthesis of traditional and modern in the evolution of Third World societies

Nodari A. Simonia

(Contributions in political science, no. 289 . Soviet American studies on the Third World)

Greenwood Press, 1992

  • : alk. paper

Available at  / 23 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Soviet literature, this theoretical study of the evolution of Third World countries represents one of the first efforts to deviate from dogmatic Stalinist methodology in analyzing Eastern and Western societies. Nodari Simonia compares two Western models of capitalist development and describes a third model in the developing countries when analyzing the processes of socio-economic and state-political development of countries in Asia and North Africa. Simonia also provides case studies of the third model--of parliamentary authoritarianism in India and Malaysia; of controlled democracy in Indonesia, Pakistan, and Egypt; and absolutist regimes in Saudi Arabia and Iran under the Shah. This unusual synthesis by a senior Soviet scholar should provoke considerable interest among academics and professionals engaged in Soviet, political theory, and social and economic development studies. This initial study in Greenwood's new Series on Soviet and American Studies on the Third World first defines the major characteristics of countries in Western Europe where the birth of capitalism was a spontaneous process, and then points to other countries where capitalism arrived later and transitional and catch up processes were needed. The first part of the book gives a historical explanation for much of what is happening in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe today. The second part discusses the emergence and development of capitalism in Eastern or Oriental countries and how capitalism was introduced and developed under external military-political pressures. Simonia also shows how colonialism was an objectively inevitable process. The author counters traditional Soviet views and also argues against some Western and Oriental scholars on questions concerning the synthesis of traditional and modern characteristics in Asia and North Africa. The third part of the book examines different versions of synthesis in these states. A short bibliography and index complete the book.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword by Bernard Reich and Andrey U. Shoumikhin Preface Formative Development and Statehood Synthesis in the Classical Model of the Development of Capitalism Primary Model: Relation of Form and Content Secondary Model: More Complex Synthesis The Tertiary Model: Developing Countries The Problem of Nation State Integration Modification of Colonial Synthesis upon Independence Modernization of Archaic Traditional Structures The Orient: Case Studies Parliamentary Authoritarianism Neo-Bonapartist Regimes or "Controlled Democracy" Absolutist-Bonapartist Regimes Absolutist-Neocolonial Regimes Conclusion Bibliography Index

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top