Risto Alapuro
Now available in Open Access thanks to the support of the University of Helsinki. By analysing the experience of Finland, Risto Alapuro shows how upheavals in powerful countries shape the internal politics of smaller countries. This linkage, a highly topical subject in the twenty-first century world, is concretely studied by putting the abortive Finnish revolution of 1917-18 into a long historical and a broad comparative perspective. In the former respect the revolution appears as a tragic culmination in the unfolding of a small European state. In the latter respect it appears as one of those crises that new states experienced when they emerged from the turmoils of the First World War.
This second edition inlcudes a new Postscript.
Biographical Note
Readership
Institutes and academic libraries whose specialties include modern European political history, notably (1) the Nordic countries and (2) Eastern Europe.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements Maps, Tables and Figures
1 The Formation of a Small Polity 1 The Problem 2 A Comparative Perspective 3 What Is to Be Explained 4 Plan of the Book
Part 1 State-Making and the Class Structure
2 Dominant Groups and State-Making 1 The Early Nineteenth Century 2 Economic Integration 3 The Late Nineteenth Century
3 The Agrarian Class Structure and Industrial Workers 1 The Industrial and Agricultural Revolutions in Finland 2 Freeholding Peasants and Agrarian Workers 3 The Link Between Industrial and Agrarian Workers 4 Crofters
4 Territorial Integration 1 Finnish Regions up to 1809 2 Reorientation from Stockholm to St. Petersburg 3 Territorial Integration in the Late Nineteenth Century 4 Core-Periphery Interaction – the County of Viipuri and Eastern Finland 5 South-Western Finland as a Core Region 6 Declining Ostrobothnia 7 Division of Labour and State Penetration in Northern Finland 8 Summary
Part 2 National Integration and Class Integration
5 Finnish Nationalism 1 The Dual Nature of Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Europe 2 Finland in a European Perspective 3 The Consolidation of a National Culture 4 Conclusion
6 Before the Revolution: Organisation, Mobilisation, and the Role of Russia 1 Early Mass Organisation 2 The Finno-Russian Conflict 3 The General Strike of 1905, Parliamentary Reform, and the Rise of Agrarian Socialism
7 Regional Consolidation of Party Support 1 Regions as Loci of Party Systems 2 The South-Western Core Region 3 The County of Viipuri 4 Ostrobothnia 5 Eastern Finland 6 Northern Finland 7 Conclusions
Part 3 The Abortive Revolution
8 On Preconditions for Revolutionary Situations
9 The Abortive Revolution of 1917–1918 1 Socialists within the Polity 2 The Rise of Multiple Sovereignty 3 The Revolutionary Situation 4 The Aftermath 5 The Social and Regional Basis for the Revolution 6 On the Character of the Finnish Revolution 7 Breakdown of Society or Contest for State Power?
10 State and Nation after the Failed Revolution 1 The Failed Revolution and the Nation 2 The Persistence of the Volcanic Model of the Finnish Revolution 3 On the State, the Nation, and Class Balance 4 The Lapua Movement, 1930–2 5 The Mass Movement and the Dominant Classes in Finnish Fascism
Part 4 The Finnish State and Revolution in a European Perspective
11 Eastern European Revolutionary Movements 1 National Movements in the Baltic Provinces 2 Revolution in the Baltic Provinces, 1905 and 1917–18 3 Challenges in East-Central Europe 4 Fascism in Eastern Europe
12 The Formation of Finland in Europe 1 Economic Consolidation 2 The Formation of State and Nation 3 Political Organisation and Mobilisation before 1917 4 Revolutionary Situations in Small European Polities 5 State and Revolution in Finland
Postscript to the Second Edition 1 A Personal Note 2 A Recapitulation 3 The Reception of the Comparative Perspective 4 Structures and Actors 5 The Associational Tradition in the Political Process 6 Causes and Scripts
References Index