Description

Book Synopsis
This volume presents the first complete translation of Antonio Gramsci’s notes on the concept of subalternity, including the prison notebook devoted to the theme of subaltern social groups. It includes a critical apparatus that clarifies Gramsci’s history, culture, and sources and contextualizes these ideas against his earlier writings and letters.

Trade Review
The subaltern defined Antonio Gramsci's work. In this volume, Joseph A. Buttigieg's final gift to the world of Gramsci, devotedly assembled and fleshed out by his former student Marcus E. Green, we at last have the full view of how that definition came into being. A treasure. -- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, author of "Can the Subaltern Speak?"
Antonio Gramsci's Prison Notebooks have become a kind of Marxist oracle, a well-spring of pithy passages deployed in the service of interminable debates, especially around questions of culture, civil society, the state, history, and the role of intellectuals. On first glance, Gramsci’s 3,000 pages of research, reflections, and analyses may appear random, disordered, even coded. But serious Gramsci scholars know better, and there are few as serious as the late Joseph A. Buttigieg and Marcus E. Green. Their painstaking and judicious reconstruction of Gramsci's writings on subaltern groups raises the bar, revealing with greater clarity the systematic development of his ideas on history, class struggles, folk culture, the state, the dynamic and contingent character of social movements, and the limits of a utopian imagination. This volume challenges us all to stop plumbing Gramsci’s notebooks for jewels and take the work and its context as a whole. Our scholarship and our movements will benefit. -- Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination
Buttigieg and Green have done a remarkable job in making available to the English-speaking world this groundbreaking text of the leading Marxist thinker of the twentieth century. -- Cornel West, Union Theological Seminary
Essential reading for all those interested in Gramsci. By skillfully combining a thematic with a philological approach and including relevant notes from the other prison notebooks, the editors reveal the profoundly historical nature of their author’s thought. History is never shoehorned into predetermined boxes. Gramsci’s theoretical concepts emerge out of history itself. -- Kate Crehan, author of Gramsci’s Common Sense: Inequality and its Narratives

Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Editor’s Notes
Introduction, by Marcus E. Green
Prison Notebooks
Notebook 25 (1934): On the Margins of History (The History of Subaltern Social Groups)
First Draft Notes of Notebook 25
Subaltern Social Groups in Miscellaneous Notes and Special Notebooks
Notes
Notebook 25 (1934): Description of the Manuscript
Notes to the Text: Notebook 25
Notes to the Text: First Draft Notes of Notebook 25
Notes to the Text: Subaltern Social Groups in Miscellaneous Notes and Special Notebooks
Sequence of Notes by Title or Opening Phrase
Index

Subaltern Social Groups

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    A Paperback / softback by Antonio Gramsci, Joseph A. Buttigieg, Marcus E. Green

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 10/08/2021
      ISBN13: 9780231190398, 978-0231190398
      ISBN10: 0231190395

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This volume presents the first complete translation of Antonio Gramsci’s notes on the concept of subalternity, including the prison notebook devoted to the theme of subaltern social groups. It includes a critical apparatus that clarifies Gramsci’s history, culture, and sources and contextualizes these ideas against his earlier writings and letters.

      Trade Review
      The subaltern defined Antonio Gramsci's work. In this volume, Joseph A. Buttigieg's final gift to the world of Gramsci, devotedly assembled and fleshed out by his former student Marcus E. Green, we at last have the full view of how that definition came into being. A treasure. -- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, author of "Can the Subaltern Speak?"
      Antonio Gramsci's Prison Notebooks have become a kind of Marxist oracle, a well-spring of pithy passages deployed in the service of interminable debates, especially around questions of culture, civil society, the state, history, and the role of intellectuals. On first glance, Gramsci’s 3,000 pages of research, reflections, and analyses may appear random, disordered, even coded. But serious Gramsci scholars know better, and there are few as serious as the late Joseph A. Buttigieg and Marcus E. Green. Their painstaking and judicious reconstruction of Gramsci's writings on subaltern groups raises the bar, revealing with greater clarity the systematic development of his ideas on history, class struggles, folk culture, the state, the dynamic and contingent character of social movements, and the limits of a utopian imagination. This volume challenges us all to stop plumbing Gramsci’s notebooks for jewels and take the work and its context as a whole. Our scholarship and our movements will benefit. -- Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination
      Buttigieg and Green have done a remarkable job in making available to the English-speaking world this groundbreaking text of the leading Marxist thinker of the twentieth century. -- Cornel West, Union Theological Seminary
      Essential reading for all those interested in Gramsci. By skillfully combining a thematic with a philological approach and including relevant notes from the other prison notebooks, the editors reveal the profoundly historical nature of their author’s thought. History is never shoehorned into predetermined boxes. Gramsci’s theoretical concepts emerge out of history itself. -- Kate Crehan, author of Gramsci’s Common Sense: Inequality and its Narratives

      Table of Contents
      Preface
      Acknowledgments
      Editor’s Notes
      Introduction, by Marcus E. Green
      Prison Notebooks
      Notebook 25 (1934): On the Margins of History (The History of Subaltern Social Groups)
      First Draft Notes of Notebook 25
      Subaltern Social Groups in Miscellaneous Notes and Special Notebooks
      Notes
      Notebook 25 (1934): Description of the Manuscript
      Notes to the Text: Notebook 25
      Notes to the Text: First Draft Notes of Notebook 25
      Notes to the Text: Subaltern Social Groups in Miscellaneous Notes and Special Notebooks
      Sequence of Notes by Title or Opening Phrase
      Index

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