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Phil H. Goodstein, The Theory of the General Strike from the French Revolution to Poland. Boulder, Colo.: East European Monographs, 1984. 337 pp.
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
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- Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 1986
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1. See Kaplan, Temma, Anarchists of Andalusia, 1868–1903 (Princeton, 1977).Google Scholar On the Fasci see Romano, S.F., Storia dei fasci Siciliani (Bari, 1959)Google Scholar; I Fasci Siciliani (Bari, 1975, 2 vol.); and Bogliari, Francesco, Il movimento contadino in Italia dall' Unità al fascismo (Torino, 1980)Google Scholar, bibliography on 77–78. For a particular interpretation of Spanish rural anarchism and the Fasci see Hobsbawm, Eric, Primitive Rebels (New York, 1959).Google Scholar On Milan an excellent study is available in English by Tilly, Louise, “I Fatti di Maggio: the Working Class of Milan and the Rebellion of 1898” in Modern European Social History, ed. Bezucha, R.J. (Lexington, Mass., 1972).Google Scholar
2. The concept of “self-limiting revolution” was born spontaneously during the first weeks of the revolution. Adam Michnik defined its essence in the essay “Time of Hope” published in the September 1980 issue of Biuletyn Informacyjny (organ of the KOR). The concept has been masterfully developed and analyzed by Staniszkis, Jadwiga, in her Poland's Self-Limiting Revolution (Princeton, 1984).Google Scholar