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revolutionism

NOUN
  1. a belief in the spread of revolutionary principles

How To Use revolutionism In A Sentence

  • The link between aesthetics and politics which forms the novel's principal thesis is only an abstract one - in practice, the link did not exist, and most of the writers, artists, filmmakers and composers who began by espousing the cause of a New Jerusalem built from Marxist revolutionism ultimately found themselves cast adrift in a murky sea of violence, war, totalitarianism and genocide. A private story
  • Karen Sifakis's Quaker-tinged revolutionism permits only property destruction. Fever Dreams of Your FBI
  • Such idealism as Singer allows in the novel is given to the few revolutionaries who appear in its pages, but theirs turns out to be a naïve revolutionism. A Yiddish Novel With Tolstoyan Sweep
  • The spontaneous revolutionism of the masses was, by contrast, fully exploited by the anarchists, who in 1881 set up the Federation of Workers of the Spanish Region.
  • It was a manifestly reformist practice carried on in the name of an illusory revolutionism. The Society of the Spectacle-by Guy Debord (translated by Ken Knabb)
  • By and large, they view the revolutionism of their predecessors as outdated.
  • He attacked the CIA and the Congress for Cultural Freedom with a savage vengeance that rekindled the revolutionism of his youth.
  • But most insistently he blames the “excessive revolutionism” of the radical democrats and their leader. The Return
  • From the anarchism of his youth to the apocalyptic Catholicism of later years, McAuley always found it hard to resist the lure of revolutionism.
  • But it conveys on Godard's part an unearned sense of being let down by them; like his revolutionism, his disillusionment with revolution has something brattish about it.
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