Gramsci's pathways /
Gramsci's works, in particular his 'Prison Notebooks', are a real 'workshop' of activity. Even though these texts were the product of a great mind and an organic conception of the world, the particular context in which they are written poses challenges for their interpreters...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Italiano |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
[2015]
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Colección: | Historical materialism book series ;
102. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface to the English Edition; Chapter 1. The Extended State; 1. The Extension of the Concept of the State; 2. The First 'Extension': Politics and Economics; 3. The Second 'Extension': Political Society and Civil Society; 4. State and Class Consciousness; 5. Dating Texts; 6. Notebook 6: Definitions; 7. The Ethical State; 8. Statolatry; 9. Unstable Equilibria; Chapter 2. Civil Society; 1. Bobbio's Interpretation; 2. Civil Society in Marx; 3. Gramsci's Dialectical Conception; 4. 'Civil Society' in Contemporary Debates; 5. A New Marxist Theory of the State.
- Chapter 3. State, Nation, Mundialisation1. Mundialisation and Globalisation; 2. Gramsci and Taylorism; 3. The Myth of Civil Society; 4. State and Nation; 5. Against 'Passive Revolution'; Chapter 4. Party and Movements; 1. Gramsci and Lenin; 2. Relations with 'the Subalterns'; 3. The Ordine Nuovo Years; 4. L'Ordine Nuovo in the Notebooks; Chapter 5. Ideologies and Conceptions of the World; 1. From Marx to Gramsci; 2. Gramsci and Marx (and Croce); 3. The Term 'Ideology'; 4. The Family of Concepts; 5. Ideology and Will; Chapter 6. Good Sense and Common Sense; 1. Two Meanings.
- 2. Spontaneity and Backwardness3. Common Sense, Neoidealism, Misoneism; 4. Marxism and Common Sense; 5. Common Sense and Philosophy; 6. The Re-evaluation of 'Good Sense'; 7. The Last Notebooks; 8. Conclusions: The Double 'Return to Marx'; Chapter 7. Morality and 'Conformism'; 1. Marx and Morality; 2. Gramsci's World; 3. Universality and Historicity; Chapter 8. Marx. From the Manifesto to the Notebooks; 1. From 'War of Movement' to 'War of Position'; 2. Marx in the Notebooks; 3. The Re-evaluation of Ideologies; 4. The National/International Connection; 5. Politics and the State.
- 6. Against the Commodity FormChapter 9. Engels's Presence in the Prison Notebooks; 1. Negative Judgements; 2. Anti-Dühring; 3. Engels's Anti-determinism; Chapter 10. Labriola: The Role of Ideology; 1. Labriola and Gramsci; 2. Marx in Labriola's First Essay; 3. From One 'Essay' to Another; 4. From Labriola to Gramsci; Chapter 11. Togliatti. The Interpreter and 'Translator'; 1. Between Fascism and Stalinism: 'For Democratic Freedoms'; 2. 'Gramsci's Politics' in Liberated Italy; 3. After '56: The 'Theorist of Politics'; 4. The Final Chapter: Gramsci, a Man.
- Chapter 12. Hegemony and Its Interpreters1. After '56: Between Dictatorship and Democracy; 2. 1967: Political and Cultural Leadership; 3. The 1970s: Hegemony and Hegemonic Apparatus; 4. 1975-6: Hegemony and Democracy; 5. 1977: The Forms of Hegemony; 6. Hegemony and 'Prestige'; 7. The 1980s: A Non-modern Gramsci?; 8. The 1990s: Hegemony and Interdependence; 9. Hegemony and Globalisation; 10. The Word 'Hegemony'; Chapter 13. Dewey, Gramsci and Cornel West; 1. Marxism and Pragmatism; 2. The American Pragmatism of the Prison Notebooks; 3. Gramsci and Dewey; 4. Dewey and Marxism; 5. West's Gramsci.