Capital & Class
34(3) 469–490
© The Author(s) 2010
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DOI: 10.1177/0309816810378723
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The uneven and
combined
development of the
Meiji Restoration:
A passive
revolutionary road to
capitalist modernity
Jamie C. Allinson
University of Edinburgh
Alexander Anievas
University of Cambridge
Abstract
In this article, we examine the utility of Antonio Gramsci’s concept of passive
revolution and its relation to Leon Trotsky’s theory of uneven and combined
development in analysing the transformational effects of world economy and
international relations on ‘late-developing’ societies’ transition to capitalism.
Although Gramsci never explicitly linked passive revolution to uneven and
combined development, we argue that Trotsky’s theory helps make explicit
assumptions present in the Prison Notebooks, but never fully thematised. In turn,
we demonstrate that incorporating passive revolution into Trotsky’s theory further
illuminates the ontology of class agencies that is often lacking in structuralist
approaches to bourgeois revolutions. In illustrating these arguments, we examine
the case of Japan’s modern state-formation process, demonstrating how the Meiji
Restoration of 1868 can be conceptualised as a passive revolution emerging
within the context of the uneven and combined process of social development
activated and generalised through the rise of the capitalist world economy.
Keywords
passive revolution, uneven and combined development, Japanese development,
Meiji Restoration
Corresponding author:
Jamie C Allinson, University of Edinburgh
Email: j.c.allinson@sms.ed.ac.uk