{"title":"《内战语法:墨西哥案例研究》,1857-61,作者:Will Fowler","authors":"","doi":"10.1162/jinh_r_01927","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This book grows out of Fowler’s previous studies of the forceful negotiations that dominated the early political life of nineteenth-century Mexico. Known as pronunciamientos, these tense affairs usually ended without cataclysmic violence and led to concessions and agreement between the contending factions. In short, Fowler has already demonstrated how democracy by other means functioned in Mexico. Such was not the case with the War of Reform from 1857 to 1861, in which the fighting claimed approximately 200,000 lives. The Grammar of Civil War explores how and why this exceptional violence came to pass. But Fowler has more than the history of Mexico on his mind this time around. After all, his previous monograph, La Guerra de Tres Años, 1857–1861 (Mexico City, 2020) delves fully into that conflict as a singular military episode. The titular “grammar” of his present study amounts to an analytical framework that Fowler proposes for the study of any modern civil conflict around the world. He maintains that the deployment of this model can explicate even such far-flung events as the seventeenthcentury English Civil War and the twenty-first-century Syrian civil war. Fowler begins by drawing from the contributions of political scientists like Kalyvas, Sambanis, and Conteh-Morgan to develop his definition of civil war. Crudely summarized, civil wars are conflicts located within the bounds of a nation-state that features a single government prior to the commencement of hostilities. They also involve at least two warring parties—one of which enjoys government sponsorship. Finally, civil wars require competing political factions that lay claim to national authority, sustained military operations, and a significant death toll of military and civilian lives on each side (7). Fowler closes his introduction by elucidating a tripartite framework for understanding how civil wars begin, the internal dynamics that compel people to continue fighting once war has begun, and the ways in which civil wars end. Each of these components receives consistent and clear explanation in a chapter of its own. To understand how civil wars begin, Fowler examines the macro-transnational sphere alongside the national-regional context, which encompasses structural contributing factors, social divides, ideological disputes, and cultural concerns. Amid these swirling forces, an activation period that is difficult to predict and even more challenging to defuse commences. 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In short, Fowler has already demonstrated how democracy by other means functioned in Mexico. Such was not the case with the War of Reform from 1857 to 1861, in which the fighting claimed approximately 200,000 lives. The Grammar of Civil War explores how and why this exceptional violence came to pass. But Fowler has more than the history of Mexico on his mind this time around. After all, his previous monograph, La Guerra de Tres Años, 1857–1861 (Mexico City, 2020) delves fully into that conflict as a singular military episode. The titular “grammar” of his present study amounts to an analytical framework that Fowler proposes for the study of any modern civil conflict around the world. He maintains that the deployment of this model can explicate even such far-flung events as the seventeenthcentury English Civil War and the twenty-first-century Syrian civil war. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这本书源于福勒之前对19世纪墨西哥早期政治生活中主导的有力谈判的研究。这些紧张的事件被称为prounciamintos,通常在没有发生灾难性暴力的情况下结束,并导致对立派系之间的让步和协议。简言之,福勒已经证明了民主是如何通过其他方式在墨西哥发挥作用的。1857年至1861年的改革战争并非如此,这场战争夺走了大约20万人的生命。《内战语法》探讨了这种特殊的暴力事件是如何发生的以及为什么发生的。但福勒这次想到的不仅仅是墨西哥的历史。毕竟,他之前的专著《La Guerra de Tres Años,1857-1861》(墨西哥城,2020)将这场冲突作为一个独特的军事事件进行了全面的探讨。福勒为研究世界各地的任何现代国内冲突提出了一个分析框架,他目前研究的名义上的“语法”相当于这个框架。他坚持认为,这个模型的部署甚至可以解释像17世纪的英国内战和21世纪的叙利亚内战这样遥远的事件。Fowler从Kalyvas、Sambanis和Conteh Morgan等政治学家的贡献开始,发展了他对内战的定义。粗略地总结一下,内战是指在敌对行动开始前,以单一政府为特征的民族国家范围内的冲突。他们还涉及至少两个交战方,其中一个得到了政府的赞助。最后,内战需要相互竞争的政治派别对国家权威提出要求,需要持续的军事行动,双方都需要大量的军人和平民死亡(7)。Fowler在引言的最后阐述了一个三方框架,用于理解内战是如何开始的,战争开始后迫使人们继续战斗的内部动力,以及内战结束的方式。这些组成部分中的每一个都在自己的一章中得到了一致而清晰的解释。为了理解内战是如何开始的,Fowler将宏观跨国领域与国家-地区背景一起进行了研究,其中包括结构性因素、社会分歧、意识形态争端和文化问题。在这些旋转的力量中,一个难以预测、甚至更具挑战性的激活期开始了。他确定了八个独特但相互关联的组成部分,这些组成部分必须在之前的压力因素导致内战之前显现出来。
The Grammar of Civil War: A Mexican Case Study, 1857–61 by Will Fowler
This book grows out of Fowler’s previous studies of the forceful negotiations that dominated the early political life of nineteenth-century Mexico. Known as pronunciamientos, these tense affairs usually ended without cataclysmic violence and led to concessions and agreement between the contending factions. In short, Fowler has already demonstrated how democracy by other means functioned in Mexico. Such was not the case with the War of Reform from 1857 to 1861, in which the fighting claimed approximately 200,000 lives. The Grammar of Civil War explores how and why this exceptional violence came to pass. But Fowler has more than the history of Mexico on his mind this time around. After all, his previous monograph, La Guerra de Tres Años, 1857–1861 (Mexico City, 2020) delves fully into that conflict as a singular military episode. The titular “grammar” of his present study amounts to an analytical framework that Fowler proposes for the study of any modern civil conflict around the world. He maintains that the deployment of this model can explicate even such far-flung events as the seventeenthcentury English Civil War and the twenty-first-century Syrian civil war. Fowler begins by drawing from the contributions of political scientists like Kalyvas, Sambanis, and Conteh-Morgan to develop his definition of civil war. Crudely summarized, civil wars are conflicts located within the bounds of a nation-state that features a single government prior to the commencement of hostilities. They also involve at least two warring parties—one of which enjoys government sponsorship. Finally, civil wars require competing political factions that lay claim to national authority, sustained military operations, and a significant death toll of military and civilian lives on each side (7). Fowler closes his introduction by elucidating a tripartite framework for understanding how civil wars begin, the internal dynamics that compel people to continue fighting once war has begun, and the ways in which civil wars end. Each of these components receives consistent and clear explanation in a chapter of its own. To understand how civil wars begin, Fowler examines the macro-transnational sphere alongside the national-regional context, which encompasses structural contributing factors, social divides, ideological disputes, and cultural concerns. Amid these swirling forces, an activation period that is difficult to predict and even more challenging to defuse commences. He identifies eight unique but linked components that must become manifest before the preceding stress factors culminate in a civil war.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History features substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews relating historical research and work in applied fields-such as economics and demographics. Spanning all geographical areas and periods of history, topics include: - social history - demographic history - psychohistory - political history - family history - economic history - cultural history - technological history