La Bibliografia gramsciana, fondata da John M. Cammett, ora curata da Francesco Giasi e da Maria Luisa Righi con la collaborazione dell'International Gramsci Society raccoglie volumi, saggi e articoli su Gramsci pubblicati dal 1922 e pubblicazioni e traduzioni degli scritti di Gramsci dal 1927. Per aggiornamenti, integrazioni o correzioni scrivere a: bibliografiagramsciana@fondazionegramsci.org

  • Callinicos, Alex The limits of passive revolution
    This article addresses what it identifies as the over-extension of the concept of passive revolution in recent writing on international political economy. It traces the evolution of the concept in the Prison Notebooks, where it is rooted in Antonio Gramsci's development of the Marxist theory of bourgeois revolutions to account for episodes of what he called 'revolution/restoration' such as the Italian Risorgimento. But, in his attempt to offer a comprehensive alternative to the great liberal philosopher Benedetto Croce, Gramsci extends the concept to cases such as Mussolini's fascism. The core meaning common to these uses is that of socio-political processes in which revolution-inducing strains are at once displaced and at least partially fulfilled. In more recent Marxist work, even this meaning is in danger of being lost. The article concludes by seeking to relocate passive revolution within Gramsci's non-determinist, but still firmly materialist, understanding of Marx's theory of history.
    FA PARTE DI: Capital and Class, 3, 2010, pp. 491 - 507
    SOGGETTI:Rivoluzione Passiva





    SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0018381, livello=AP, titolo=The limits of passive revolution, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=uniform, responsability_namePart=[Callinicos, Alex], autorevoc=[Callinicos, Alex], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-001134], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Callinicos, Alex, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], abstract=This article addresses what it identifies as the over-extension of the concept of passive revolution in recent writing on international political economy. It traces the evolution of the concept in the Prison Notebooks, where it is rooted in Antonio Gramsci's development of the Marxist theory of bourgeois revolutions to account for episodes of what he called 'revolution/restoration' such as the Italian Risorgimento. But, in his attempt to offer a comprehensive alternative to the great liberal philosopher Benedetto Croce, Gramsci extends the concept to cases such as Mussolini's fascism. The core meaning common to these uses is that of socio-political processes in which revolution-inducing strains are at once displaced and at least partially fulfilled. In more recent Marxist work, even this meaning is in danger of being lost. The article concludes by seeking to relocate passive revolution within Gramsci's non-determinist, but still firmly materialist, understanding of Marx's theory of history., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Capital and Class], relazioni_identificativo=[], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[34], relazioni_numero_issue=[3], relazioni_start=[491], relazioni_end=[507], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2010], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20101010-20112310], relazioni_tipo_data=[inferred], relazioni_luogo=[], relazioni_editore=[], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Rivoluzione Passiva], subjectvoc=[Passive revolution], note_riservate=, source=IGS-2010, recordInfo=francescogiasi@libero.it, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0018381, recordOrigin=MODS.2CA7488192074C7, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20101010-20112310}]