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The rhythm of thought in Gramsci : a diachronic interpretation of Prison notebooks /

Many scholars have recently shown great interest in a diachronic re-examination of Antonio Gramsci's main theoretical-political categories in the Prison Notebooks . This method would uncover the origins and development of Gramsci's concepts using the same method that Gramsci himself believ...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Cospito, Giuseppe, 1966- (Autor)
Otros Autores: Ponzini, Arianna (Traductor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Italiano
Publicado: Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2016]
Colección:Historical materialism book series ; 130.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • A Note on the Text; ‎Preface. Questions of Method; ‎Part 1. Philosophy
  • Politics
  • Economics; ‎Chapter 1. Structure and Superstructures; ‎1. Working Hypothesis; ‎2. The 'Bukharinian' Phase (from the Party School to Notebook 4, 12 and 15: 1925-30); ‎3. The 'Centrist' Thesis from the End of 1930 (Notebook 4, 38); ‎4. The 'Crisis' of 1931 (Notebook 7); ‎5. Moving beyond the Architectural Metaphor (Notebook 8: End of 1931-Beginning of 1932); ‎6. The 'Inertia' of the Old Formulations (Notebooks 10, 11 and 13: 1932-3); ‎7. 'Unended Quest' (Notebooks 10, 11, 14, 15 and 17: 1932-5)
  • ‎8. Provisional Conclusions‎Chapter 2. Hegemony; ‎1. Introduction; ‎2. 'Posing the Issue'; ‎3. Hegemony and Civil Society; ‎4. Hegemony and the Intellectuals; ‎5. Hegemony and the Party; ‎6. The Sources of Gramsci's Concept of Hegemony; ‎7. A (Re)definition of Gramsci's Concept of Hegemony; ‎Chapter 3. Regulated Society; ‎1. Philosophy
  • Politics
  • Economics; ‎2. 'Importuning the Texts'; ‎3. The Regulated Society 'from Utopia to Science'; ‎4. Towards a New Reformation?; ‎5. Gramsci as Critic of the 'Critical Economy'; ‎6. Toward 'a New Economic Science'
  • ‎Part 2. The Analysis of Several Internal Dynamics of the Notebooks‎Chapter 4. The 'Alternatives' to Structure-Superstructure; ‎1. 'Quantity and Quality'; ‎2. 'Content and Form'; ‎3. 'Objective and Subjective'; ‎4. 'Historical Bloc'; ‎Chapter 5. The Gradual Transformation in Gramsci's Categories; ‎1. Methodological Premise; ‎2. 'Organic', 'Bureaucratic', 'Democratic Centralism'; ‎3. 'Common Sense' and/or 'Good Sense'; ‎4. Civil Society; ‎Chapter 6. Gramsci and the Marxist Tradition; ‎1. 'Marx, the Author of Concrete Political and Historical Works': Caesarism and Bonapartism
  • ‎2. Engels and the Marxist 'Vulgate'‎3. Conclusion: Gramsci, from Lenin to Marx