Description
Book SynopsisLeading Brazilian Marxist theorist Coutinho offers an analysis of the evolution of the political thought of Antonio Gramsci. Focusing on central concepts of the Prison Notebooks and relating them to the history of modern political ideas, the book also demonstrates that Gramsci's ideas continue to be relevant resources for understanding the controversies of our present time.
Trade Review[This publication] provides a wonderful opportunity to draw some attention to the debates on Gramsci in Latin America [...]. and is an essential window through which to view debates in and beyond Brazil. Adam David Morton, For the Desk Drawer Gramsci’s Political Thought ... offers a unique vantage point into South American Gramscian studies not previously afforded to the Anglophone scholar
one of [its] strengths is its decisive and clear account of Gramsci’s own interpretation of Leninism as a living and vibrant practice, making no allowances for theoretical laziness and dogmatism. Coutinho endeavours to present Gramsci (in the pre-carceral era as well as that of the Notebooks) as an ever-vigilant challenger to dogmatic approaches to Marxism. Chris Walsh, International Socialist Group
[This publication] provides a wonderful opportunity to draw some attention to the debates on Gramsci in Latin America [...]. and is an essential window through which to view debates in and beyond Brazil. —Adam David Morton, For the Desk Drawer “Gramsci’s Political Thought ... offers a unique vantage point into South American Gramscian studies not previously afforded to the Anglophone scholar … one of [its] strengths is its decisive and clear account of Gramsci’s own interpretation of Leninism as a living and vibrant practice, making no allowances for theoretical laziness and dogmatism. Coutinho endeavours to present Gramsci (in the pre-carceral era as well as that of the Notebooks) as an ever-vigilant challenger to dogmatic approaches to Marxism. “ —Chris Walsh, International Socialist Group
Table of ContentsPreface Introduction by Joseph A. Buttigieg 1. Youth, a Contradictory Formation: 1910–18 1.1. Sardinia 1.2. The encounter with Croce and Gentile 1.3. Gramsci turns away from the Marxism of the Second International 2. Workers’ Democracy and Factory-Councils: 1919–20 2.1. L’Ordine Nuovo 2.2. Gramsci and Bordiga 2.3. The defeat of the councils 3. The Passage to Maturity: 1921–6 3.1. From the foundation of the PCd’I to the fight against Fascism 3.2. The struggle against sectarianism 3.3. The first formulations of the concept of hegemony 4. Methodological Observations on the Prison Notebooks 4.1. The systematic nature of the Notebooks 4.2. Gramsci’s place in the evolution of Marxism 4.3. Gramsci as a critic of politics 4.4. On the relations between politics, economics and social totality 4.5. Gramsci’s philosophical conceptions 5. The ‘Extended’ Theory of the State 5.1. The concept of ‘civil society’ 5.2. ‘Regulated society’ and the end of the state 6. Socialist Strategy in the ‘West’ 6.1. War of movement and war of position 6.2. On the concept of passive revolution 6.3. From Gramsci’s proposal of a ‘constituent assembly’ to Togliatti’s 'progressive democracy’ 7. The Party as ‘Collective Intellectual’ 8. The Current Relevance and Universality of Gramsci 8.1. Another socialist model 8.2. A radical conception of democracy 8.3. With Gramsci, beyond Gramsci Appendix One: General Will and Democracy in Rousseau, Hegel and Gramsci 1.1. The priority of the public 1.2. Rousseau and the general will 1.3. Hegel and the determinations of will 1.4. Gramsci and hegemony as contract Appendix Two: The Neoliberal Age: Passive Revolution or Counter-Reformation? 2.1. Passive revolution 2.2. Counter-reformation 2.3. The welfare-state as passive revolution 2.4. Neoliberalism as counter-reformation 2.5. Transformism Appendix Three: Gramsci and Brazil 3.1. Reception 3.2. Uses References Index