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
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0019477, livello=B1, titolo=Gramsci and Languages, sottotitolo=Unification, Diversity, Hegemony, tipo_titolo=uniform, responsability_namePart=[Carlucci, Alessandro], autorevoc=[Carlucci, Alessandro], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-006620], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Carlucci, Alessandro, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=Leiden, editore=Brill, forma_visualizzata=2013, forma_normalizzata=20130101-20131231, tipo_data=inferred, consistenza=256, lingua=[eng], paese=[NL], abstract=Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) is one of the most translated Italian authors of all time. After the Second World War his thought became increasingly influential, and remained relevant throughout the second half of the century. Today, it is generally agreed that his Marxism has highly original and personal features, as confirmed by the fact that his international influence has continued to grow since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Gramsci and Languages offers an explanation of this originality and traces the origins of certain specific features of Gramsci's political thought by looking at his lifelong interest in language, especially in questions of linguistic diversity and unification., table_contents=IntroductionLinguistic reflections as an integral part of Gramsci's legacy Modern linguistics and the philosophy of praxisTowards a better understanding of Gramsci's views1. The limited number of writings usually considered2. The risks involved in neglecting Gramsci's biography3. Identifying sources and cultural links: a productive trend in recent research4. Linguistic themes and the debates on Gramsci's LeninismDiversity and unification: a few considerations in conclusion1. Experiencing Linguistic Diversity and Cultural Unification1.1. Sardinian in Gramsci's life1.2. Gramsci's correspondence1.3. The Sardinian years1.4. Turin1.5. The Sassari Brigade in Turin, April-July 19191.5.1. The arrival of the Brigade1.5.2. The editorial board of L'Ordine Nuovo1.5.3. The successful campaign among Sardinian soldiers1.6. From Turin to the prison years1.7. Gramsci's views on national linguistic unification1.7.1. 'Every individual ... is a philosopher'1.7.2. The shortcomings of monolingualism1.7.3. Final remarks2. Influences and Differences: The Formation of Gramsci's Views2.1. Gramsci's direct and indirect sources in language studies2.2. Echoes of Saussure's ideas2.2.1. Grammar2.2.2. Metaphors2.2.3. Language planning2.2.4. The penetration of Saussurean concepts into Italian intellectual culture2.2.5. A possible channel of transmission: the Cours in Russia, 1917-19252.2.6. Final remarks2.3. Language and social classes2.3.1. Sociological linguistics and the Marxist critique of language2.3.2. Bukharin2.3.3. Sociolinguistic variation and the national question in the USSR2.3.4. Grammar and language education for the popular masses2.3.5. Final remarks2.4. Glottopolitical aspects of Lenin's influence2.4.1. Early Marxist approaches to language policies: Marx and Engels2.4.2. The Second International2.4.3. Lenin2.4.4. Did Gramsci know Lenin's ideas on language?2.4.5. Affinities2.4.6. Jewish autonomy: a case of partial divergence2.4.7. Final remarks2.5. Rationalising and unifying linguistic communication2.5.1. Soviet Esperantism2.5.2. Proletarian culture2.5.3. Sources and periodisation2.5.4. Continuity and consistency of Gramsci's glottopolitical views2.5.5. Final remarks: Soviet inputs and the development of Gramsci's views3. Political Implications3.1. Gramsci and the linguistics of his time3.2. Language and politics in Gramsci's writings3.3. The role of linguistic themes in shaping Gramsci's politics3.3.1. Necessary conditions3.3.2. Centres of irradiation3.3.3. The Jacobins3.3.4. Language and hegemony3.4. Gramsci's specificity3.4.1. A man 'in flesh and blood'3.4.2. Gramsci's Marxism3.4.3. Final remarksConclusions: Gramscian Links between Language and PoliticsGramsci in linguistics......and linguistics in GramsciAppendix: Gramsci's Legacy, 1937-20074.1. The reception of Gramsci's writings: the letters4.2. Lost, unpublished and recently published material4.2.1. Matteo Bartoli's glottology course of 1912-134.2.2. Gramsci's translation of Finck's work4.2.3. Gramsci's comments on Panzini's Italian grammar4.2.4. Early work on Manzoni4.3. Pre-prison writings and prison notes4.4. Gramsci's writings on language4.5. Gramsci and linguistic disciplines4.5.1. Early research4.5.2. Exploring Gramsci's ideas on language4.5.3. Using Gramsci's ideas on language4.5.4. Gramsci's influence and its limits: some examples4.5.5. Final remarksReferences Index, titolo_collana=Historical Materialism, collocazione=G. 814, soggettivoc=[Lingua (e Linguistica), Egemonia], subjectvoc=[Language (including Linguistics), Hegemony], note_riservate=, source=, recordInfo=francescogiasi@libero.it, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0019477, recordOrigin=MODS.2CB3384337565E2, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Adamson, Walter L.Gramsci, Catholicism and Secular Religion
FA PARTE DI:
Politics, Religion & Ideology, vol. 14, Issue 4: Routledge - Taylor & Francis group, 2013, 468-484
citazione
Adamson, Walter L.,
Gramsci, Catholicism and Secular Religion, in Politics, Religion & Ideology, vol. 14, Issue 4: Routledge - Taylor & Francis group, 2013, 468-484
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0019706, livello=AP, titolo=Gramsci, Catholicism and Secular Religion, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Adamson, Walter L.], autorevoc=[Adamson, Walter L.], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-000294], responsability_ruolo=[autore], first_author=Adamson, Walter L., forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=Routledge - Taylor & Francis group, forma_visualizzata=2013, forma_normalizzata=20130101-20131231, tipo_data=, consistenza=pp. 468-484, lingua=[eng], paese=[US], abstract=The article considers Antonio Gramsci's views of religion, the relation of Marxism and religion, secularisation, and secular religion as an overcoming of traditional religions in order to probe his assessment, while he was in prison in the 1930s, of the concrete prospects for a Marxist overcoming of Christianity in the West and, specifically, of the Catholic Church in Italy. It shows that Gramsci had a well-developed and sophisticated historical analysis of secularisation in the West, which he presented in relation to a history of the Catholic Church understood as both a clerical organisation and a community of the faithful. It argues that this analysis led him to conclude that the Church had remained remarkably strong in interwar Italy and, thus, that the immediate prospects for the triumph of secular religion there were remote. However, it also explains why his historical analysis of secularisation left him relatively confident about the long-term prospects of a Marxist secular religion. The article argues that we cannot know if Gramsci would have concurred with the secular-religious strategy pursued by the postwar Italian Communist Party under Palmiro Togliatti and his successors, but it suggests that the very notion of a society based on a common religious worldview is no longer historically plausible., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Politics, Religion & Ideology, vol. 14, Issue 4], relazioni_identificativo=[], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[], relazioni_end=[], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[], relazioni_editore=[Routledge - Taylor & Francis group], relazioni_paese=[USA], note_riservate=, source=, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0019706, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
McCarthy, ConorSaid, Lukács, and Gramsci: Beginnings, Geography, and Insurrection
FA PARTE DI:
College Literature: A Journal of Critical Literary Studies, 4, Fall 2013, Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 74 - 104
citazione
McCarthy, Conor,
Said, Lukács, and Gramsci: Beginnings, Geography, and Insurrection, in College Literature: A Journal of Critical Literary Studies; Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013, pp. 74 - 104
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0019707, livello=AP, titolo=Said, Lukács, and Gramsci, sottotitolo=Beginnings, Geography, and Insurrection, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[McCarthy, Conor], autorevoc=[McCarthy, Conor], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007653], responsability_ruolo=[autore], first_author=McCarthy, Conor, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=Baltimore, editore=The Johns Hopkins University Press, forma_visualizzata=2013, forma_normalizzata=20130101-20131231, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[US], abstract=This essay argues that Edward Said's work was deeply shaped by Georg Lukács's theory of reification and totality, as set out in History and Class Consciousness, and also molded by a reinflection of Lukács's thinking through the work of Antonio Gramsci. The interweaving of the influences of Lukács and Gramsci was fundamental in enabling Said's radicalized geographical criticism. The essay shows that though Said frequently disavowed "totalizing" thought, Lukácsian theory actually underpins the ways Said opens his major books, from Beginnings to Culture and Imperialism. The influence of Gramsci, appearing from the later 1970s onward, permits Said to spatialize the insights he had already incorporated from Lukács in a productive interplay., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[College Literature: A Journal of Critical Literary Studies], relazioni_identificativo=[], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[40], relazioni_numero_issue=[4], relazioni_start=[74], relazioni_end=[104], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[Fall 2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Baltimore], relazioni_editore=[The Johns Hopkins University Press], relazioni_paese=[US], note_riservate=, source=Project Muse, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0019707, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Giglioli, Matteo Fabio Nels,
Legitimacy and Revolution in a Society of Masses: Max Weber, Antonio Gramsci, and the Fin-de-Siecle Debate on Social Order; New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 2013, 260
SOGGETTI:
Weber, Max; Teoria della legittimazione; Alienazione; Rivoluzione
Giglioli, Matteo Fabio Nels,
Legitimacy and Revolution in a Society of Masses: Max Weber, Antonio Gramsci, and the Fin-de-Siecle Debate on Social Order; New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 2013, 260
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020030, livello=B2, titolo=Legitimacy and Revolution in a Society of Masses, sottotitolo=Max Weber, Antonio Gramsci, and the Fin-de-Siecle Debate on Social Order, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Giglioli, Matteo Fabio Nels], autorevoc=[Giglioli, Matteo Fabio Nels], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007772], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Giglioli, Matteo Fabio Nels, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=New Brunswick, N.J., editore=Transaction Publishers, forma_visualizzata=2013, forma_normalizzata=20130101-20131231, tipo_data=, consistenza=260, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=Cap. 7 "Legitimacy, Alienation, Totality. Antonio Gramsci (pp. 193-232)
The author examines certain aspects of the intellectual and political background of early twentieth-century theories of legitimacy elaborated by Max Weber and Antonio Gramsci. These theories are interpreted as the outcome of a contested process of redefinition of the concept, itself prompted by the social and political circumstances of the late nineteenth century, such as economic modernization and the attempt to incorporate the working class into the political system., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=FIG: G. 998 (ed. 2017), soggettivoc=[Weber, Max, Teoria della legittimazione, Alienazione, Rivoluzione], subjectvoc=[Weber, Max, Theory of Legitimateness, Alienation, Revolution], note_riservate=, source=ISBN: 978-1-4128-5162-6
IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020030, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, edited by Michael Ekers, Gillian Hart, Stefan Kipfer and Alex Loftus; Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013, 362 p.
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042, livello=CB, titolo=Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=uniform, responsability_namePart=[Ekers, Michael, Kipfer, Stefan, Loftus, Alex, Hart , Gillian], autorevoc=[Ekers, Michael, Kipfer, Stefan, Loftus, Alex, Hart , Gillian], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007500, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-006328, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007581, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007777], responsability_ruolo=[curatore, curatore, curatore, curatore], first_author=Ekers, Michael, forma_parallela=, responsability=edited by Michael Ekers, Gillian Hart, Stefan Kipfer and Alex Loftus, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=Oxford, editore=Wiley-Blackwell, forma_visualizzata=2013, forma_normalizzata=20130101-20131231, tipo_data=, consistenza=362 p., lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This collection brings attention to Antonio Gramsci's work within geographical debates. Presenting a substantially different reading to Gramsci scholarship, the collection forges a new approach within human geography, environmental studies and development theory., table_contents=Notes on Contributors vii
Abbreviations of Works by Antonio Gramsci ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Framings 1
"A Barbed Gift of the Backwoods": Gramsci's Sardinian Beginnings 3
Michael Ekers, Gillian Hart, Stefan Kipfer, and Alex Loftus
How to Live with Stones 6
John Berger
Introduction 13
1 Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics 15
Michael Ekers and Alex Loftus
Part I Space 45
2 Traveling with Gramsci: The Spatiality of Passive Revolution 47
Adam David Morton
3 "Gramsci in Action": Space, Politics, and the Making of Solidarities 65
David Featherstone
4 City, Country, Hegemony: Antonio Gramsci's Spatial Historicism 83
5 State of Confusion: Money and the Space of Civil Society in Hegel and Gramsci 104
Geoff Mann
Part II Nature 121
6 The Concept of Nature in Gramsci 123
Benedetto Fontana
7 Space, Ecology, and Politics in the Praxis of the Brazilian Landless Movement 142
Abdurazack Karriem
8 On the Nature of Gramsci's "Conceptions of the World" 161
Joel Wainwright
9 Gramsci, Nature, and the Philosophy of Praxis 178
Alex Loftus
10 Difference and Inequality in World Affairs: A Gramscian Analysis 197
Nicola Short
11 Gramsci and the Erotics of Labor: More Notes on "The Sexual Question" 217
Michael Ekers
Part III Politics 239
12 Cracking Hegemony: Gramsci and the Dialectics of Rebellion 241
Jim Glassman
13 Gramsci at the Margins: A Prehistory of the Maoist Movement in Nepal 258
Vinay Gidwani and Dinesh Paudel
14 Accumulation through Dispossession and Accumulation through Growth: Intimations of Massacres Foretold? 279
Judith Whitehead
15 Gramsci, Geography, and the Languages of Populism 301
Gillian Hart
Conclusion 321
16 Translating Gramsci in the Current Conjuncture 323
Stefan Kipfer and Gillian Hart
Index 345, titolo_collana=, collocazione=FIG : G. 784, soggettivoc=[Filosofia Della Praxis, Postmarxismo, Ecologia], subjectvoc=[Philosophy of Praxis, Postmarxism, Ecology], note_riservate=ISBN: 978-1-4443-3970-3, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Kipfer, Stefan,
City, Country, Hegemony: Antonio Gramsci's Spatial Historicism, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 83 - 103
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020047, livello=E1, titolo=City, Country, Hegemony, sottotitolo=Antonio Gramsci's Spatial Historicism, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Kipfer, Stefan], autorevoc=[Kipfer, Stefan], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-006328], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Kipfer, Stefan, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], abstract=This chapter aims to demonstrate that the spatial aspects of Antonio Gramsci's work do not contradict his historicism. Gramsci's historicism is spatial: his geographically nuanced analysis of social relations and political projects emerged out of the same method that yielded his historically differentiated insights. After an opening discussion of Gramsci's historicism and the role of space therein, the chapter concentrates on Gramsci's treatment of the relationship between city and countryside. Gramsci's discussion of city and countryside allows to establish most clearly the difference between his historicism and diffusionist treatments of urbanization in modernization theory. In today's urbanizing world, considerations of spatial organization are vital not only for the prospects of hegemony, but also for the future of the planet. For this purpose, Gramsci's emphasis on hegemony as a project to transform, not magnify, spatial divides (rural, urban, or otherwise) is more crucial than ever., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[83], relazioni_end=[103], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[storicismo, egemonia], subjectvoc=[Historism, Hegemony], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020047, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Mann, Geoff,
State of Confusion: Money and the Space of Civil Society in Hegel and Gramsci, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 104 - 120
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020048, livello=E1, titolo=State of Confusion, sottotitolo=Money and the Space of Civil Society in Hegel and Gramsci, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Mann, Geoff], autorevoc=[Mann, Geoff], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007576], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Mann, Geoff, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter outlines a concept of money in contemporary society that helps clarify the geography of Antonio Gramsci's civil society, the dimensions and reach of civil society not as distinct from the state, but as partially constitutive of and absolutely essential to the modern state. A good place to start discussion of civil society is Hobbes's Leviathan. For Hegel, money is something special and especially powerful in the modern world, imbricated in, and of particular interest to, the state. For Gramsci, Hegel's analysis of civil society was enormously fruitful. The chapter argues that while money may be missing from Gramsci's writing, it is possible to construct a first-cut Gramscian theory of money using those aspects of his conception of civil society built upon Hegelian foundations., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[104], relazioni_end=[120], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, Società Civile], subjectvoc=[Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, Civil Society], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020048, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Fontana, Benedetto,
The Concept of Nature in Gramsci, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 121 - 141
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020049, livello=E1, titolo=The Concept of Nature in Gramsci, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Fontana, Benedetto], autorevoc=[Fontana, Benedetto], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-002178], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Fontana, Benedetto, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter discusses Antonio Gramsci's concept of nature and its relation to his political thought. When Gramsci does refer to nature and to the natural, his statements are theoretically interesting and politically important, not only because of what they say about nature, but also because of what they say about his concepts of hegemony and of politics. Implicit in Gramsci's conception of politics - central to which is the notion of hegemony - is a particular understanding of the natural and the material, nonhuman world. It is possible to discern in Gramsci's writings five major strands or ideas regarding nature and the natural. The concept of praxis is crucial to the understanding of Gramsci's position regarding the relation between social men and nature., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[121], relazioni_end=[141], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Egemonia, Filosofia della praxis], subjectvoc=[Hegemony, Philosophy of Praxis], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020049, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Ecologia; Movimenti Sociali; Filosofia della praxis
citazione
Karriem, Abdurazack,
Space, Ecology, and Politics in the Praxis of the Brazilian Landless Movement, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 142 - 160
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020050, livello=E1, titolo=Space, Ecology, and Politics in the Praxis of the Brazilian Landless Movement, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Karriem, Abdurazack], autorevoc=[Karriem, Abdurazack], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007779], responsability_ruolo=[autore], first_author=Karriem, Abdurazack, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter commences by outlining the theoretical considerations focusing on how politics, space, and nature congeal in Antonio Gramsci's philosophy of praxis. It then proceeds to analyze the Brazilian Landless Movement (MST)'s early history and illustrates how space and politics manifest themselves in struggles for land and a popular project of social transformation. Subsequently, it investigates the factors that shaped the transition to agroecology, arguing that agroecological experiences at the land reform settlement scale were key in informing the movement's political ecological praxis. The chapter then evaluates MST mobilizations that contest corporate control over seeds. Finally, the chapter summarizes the key arguments discussed, reflects on the difference Gramscian reading makes on the understanding of the MST, and briefly appraises how the MST's praxis pushes the reader to rethink Gramsci in the contemporary conjuncture., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[142], relazioni_end=[160], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[17.12.2012], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Ecologia, Movimenti Sociali, Filosofia della praxis], subjectvoc=[Ecology, Social Movement, Philosophy of Praxis], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020050, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Quaderni del carcere; Concezione del mondo; Filosofia marxista
citazione
Wainwright, Joel,
On the Nature of Gramsci's "Conceptions of the World", in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 161 - 177
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020051, livello=E1, titolo=On the Nature of Gramsci's "Conceptions of the World", sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Wainwright, Joel], autorevoc=[Wainwright, Joel], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007285], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Wainwright, Joel, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter contends that Antonio Gramsci could be described as a Marxist philosopher who investigated "conceptions of the world" (concezione del mondo). This expression, which Gramsci used sparingly before 1930 and more frequently after, is woven like a red thread through his Prison Notebooks. This chapter argues that "conceptions of the world" represents one of the most creative and radical elements of Gramsci's thought. It suggests that Gramsci uses this concept to refer to practical, relational approaches to being-in-the-world. Gramsci equates Marxist criticism with the formation of a coherent conception of the world. This, he contends, is the essence of Marxist philosophy: the critical historicizing of one's conception of the world. "Conceptions of the world" functions in the Prison Notebooks as both an analytical/descriptive and a moral/political concept. To conclude, the chapter considers how Gramsci's conception of the world is related to his Marx-inspired approach to nature., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[161], relazioni_end=[177], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Quaderni del carcere, Concezione del mondo, Filosofia marxista], subjectvoc=[Prison Notebooks, Conceptions of the world, Marxist Philosophy], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020051, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Loftus, Alex,
Gramsci, Nature, and the Philosophy of Praxis, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 178 - 196
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020052, livello=E1, titolo=Gramsci, Nature, and the Philosophy of Praxis, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Loftus, Alex], autorevoc=[Loftus, Alex], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007581], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Loftus, Alex, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=Either implicitly or explicitly, critical environmental thought often takes as its target "ideologies of nature." This chapter considers Antonio Gramsci's writings on nature in relation to his philosophy of praxis. Rather than finding a conception of nature in his scattered notes on the subject, the chapter argues that nature must be situated within the overall philosophy of praxis. Nature is fundamental to the three component parts of Gramsci's philosophy of praxis, something Gramsci defines as "absolute 'historicism,' the absolute secularization and earthliness of thought, an absolute humanism of history." Until recently, Gramsci's writings have rarely been considered in relation to environmental questions. Political ecology is perhaps the one subfield where Gramscian ideas have taken hold. Gramsci's conception of ideology, if situated within his overall philosophy of praxis, could serve as a key contribution to environmental thought., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[178], relazioni_end=[196], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[], relazioni_editore=[], relazioni_paese=[], soggettivoc=[Ecologia, Storicismo, Filosofia della praxis], subjectvoc=[Ecology, Historism, Philosophy of Praxis], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020052, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Short, Nicola,
Difference and Inequality in World Affairs: A Gramscian Analysis, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 197 - 216
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020053, livello=E1, titolo=Difference and Inequality in World Affairs, sottotitolo=A Gramscian Analysis, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Short, Nicola], autorevoc=[Short, Nicola], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007780], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Short, Nicola, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter considers the question of racialized and gendered difference and inequality in world affairs from a Gramscian perspective. The discussion is organized in three parts. The first sketches briefly some elements of Antonio Gramsci's method useful for understanding the logic of racialized and gendered difference as he posed it, primarily under the rubric of two questions: "The Southern Question," and "The Sexual Question." The second section considers Gramsci's engagement with the Southern Question and his reading of the politics of uneven development in Italy. The third section explores the question of gender and "the sexual question," in which the role of gender as an ethico-political element of changing regimes of production is explored. The chapter concludes by considering the implications of an analysis of Gramsci's work for the understanding of the relationship between race, gender, and class, as well as the conditions and strategies for genuinely emancipatory politics., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[197], relazioni_end=[216], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[], relazioni_editore=[], relazioni_paese=[], soggettivoc=[Disuguaglianza, Questione sessuale, Questione meridionale], subjectvoc=[Inequality, Sexual Question, Southern Question], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020053, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Glassman, Jim,
Cracking Hegemony: Gramsci and the Dialectics of Rebellion, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 239 - 257
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020055, livello=E1, titolo=Cracking Hegemony, sottotitolo=Gramsci and the Dialectics of Rebellion, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Glassman, Jim], autorevoc=[Glassman, Jim], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007429], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Glassman, Jim, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=If one wishes to explain not how the subaltern accommodate but, rather, how they rebel, one typically sets Antonio Gramsci aside. Instead of leaving Gramsci behind in order to explain rebellion, this chapter argues that rebellion can be read precisely through a Gramscian framework that foregrounds conceptions such as hegemony. It selectively mines several texts - most especially Gramsci's essay "Americanism and Fordism" - for usable insights that illustrate the enabling conditions for rebellion that exist within contexts of hegemony. The major purpose of the chapter is to show that a conception of the capacity for rebellion need not and should not steer clear of Gramscian perceptions regarding hegemony, as has been the case for various approaches on the intellectual Left in recent decades., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[239], relazioni_end=[257], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Americanismo Fordismo, Egemonia], subjectvoc=[Americanism Fordism, Hegemony], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020055, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Rivoluzione maoista; Cultura indiana; Movimenti Sociali
citazione
Paudel, Dinesh,
Gramsci at the Margins: A Prehistory of the Maoist Movement in Nepal, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 258 - 278
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020056, livello=E1, titolo=Gramsci at the Margins, sottotitolo=A Prehistory of the Maoist Movement in Nepal, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Paudel, Dinesh, Gidwani, Vinay], autorevoc=[Paudel, Dinesh, Gidwani, Vinay], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007782, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007781], responsability_ruolo=[author, author], first_author=Paudel, Dinesh, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter aims to convey the relevance of Antonio Gramsci and south Asian subaltern studies in understanding the Maoist uprising in Nepal, and to put this phenomenon in perspective by evoking its long history. As Ranajit Guha suggests in Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial India, his seminal examination of rural rebellions, jacqueries, and revolts under British rule, Gramsci's ideas must be extended if they are to supply an adequate explanatory framework for understanding how and why popular uprisings unfolded in the manner they did. Via forays into the micro-history of Thabang, one of the formative sites of Nepal's Maoist revolution, this chapter attempts to show how Gramsci's ideas remain deeply relevant to understanding political transformations at the margin. Thabang's rebellions show how peasant movements can overcome the constraints of geography and how geography can be mobilized for politics., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[258], relazioni_end=[278], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Rivoluzione maoista, Cultura indiana, Movimenti Sociali], subjectvoc=[Maoism, Indian Culture, Social Movement], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020056, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Whitehead, Judith,
Accumulation through Dispossession and Accumulation through Growth: Intimations of Massacres Foretold?, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 279 - 300
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020057, livello=E1, titolo=Accumulation through Dispossession and Accumulation through Growth, sottotitolo=Intimations of Massacres Foretold?, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Whitehead, Judith], autorevoc=[Whitehead, Judith], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007783], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Whitehead, Judith, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=
The changes occurring in the wake of India's neoliberal reforms, starting in the mid-1980s, illustrate the continuing relevance of Antonio Gramsci's view that the national state occupies a nodal level in international political economy, while necessitating fresh approaches and new assessments of India's current "passive revolution". This chapter argues that patterns of accumulative dispossession have intensified in India in recent years and that these are driven by financialization, while producing new class configurations. The growing poles of accumulation by dispossession and accumulation by growth are one of the most important contradictions of capitalist reproduction in contemporary India. The first social movements countering accumulation by dispossession in India were launched by localized social movements that often referred to themselves as "ecosocialists". The second major political formation that has actively set itself against contemporary dispossession and indeed against capitalist development in general is a resurgent Maoist movement, known in India as Naxalism.
Senso Comune; Nazional-Popolare; Filosofia della praxis
citazione
Hart , Gillian,
Gramsci, Geography, and the Languages of Populism, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 301 - 320
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020058, livello=E1, titolo=Gramsci, Geography, and the Languages of Populism, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Hart , Gillian], autorevoc=[Hart , Gillian], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007777], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Hart , Gillian, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter suggests how Antonio Gramsci's theory of language enables us to work with, against, and beyond Ernesto Laclau in extending, reworking, and enriching his analysis to grapple with emerging forms of populism. For Gramsci, language was crucial to grasping the popular appeal of fascism, as well as the working of hegemony more generally. Language and translation were also central to the philosophy of praxis - the practices and processes of rendering coherent fragmentary "common sense," enabling new forms of critical practice. Closely linked with Gramsci's work on language is his relational concept of the person - a concept fundamentally different from either a liberal notion of the sovereign subject, or a structuralist conception of interpellation. The arguments developed in this chapter provide leverage into the rise of populist politics over the past decade in South Africa - while also requiring further elaboration in relation to unfolding challenges., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[301], relazioni_end=[320], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Senso Comune, Nazional-Popolare, Filosofia della praxis], subjectvoc=[Common Sense, National-Popular, Philosophy of Praxis], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020058, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Kipfer, Stefan,
Translating Gramsci in the Current Conjuncture, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 321 - 343
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020059, livello=E1, titolo=Translating Gramsci in the Current Conjuncture, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Kipfer, Stefan, Hart , Gillian], autorevoc=[Kipfer, Stefan, Hart , Gillian], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-006328, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007777], responsability_ruolo=[author, author], first_author=Kipfer, Stefan, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=Moving beyond Antonio Gramsci today necessarily entails elements of betrayal, but it is also very much in the spirit of translation as Gramsci conceived and practiced it. This chapter begins by pointing to the distance between the speculative left that embraces a transcendental notion of politics/the political and a Gramscian understanding of politics as translation. It aims to show, both singularly and collectively, how Frantz Fanon, Himani Bannerji, and Henri Lefebvre strengthen and reshape Gramsci's spatial historicism. Through the works of these authors, Gramsci can be actualized and redirected - translated - in a properly postcolonial, explicitly feminist, theoretically spatialized, and antiproductivist fashion. Gramsci is both vital and insufficient to approach anti- and postcolonial nationalisms. This point becomes particularly clear in debates on Indian nationalism. Gramsci's Marxism remains crucial for anyone interested in linking an analysis of historical conjunctures to a search for nuanced political strategies., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[321], relazioni_end=[343], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Traduzione, Marxismo, Postcolonialismo], subjectvoc=[Translation, Marxism, Postcolonialism], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020059, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Loftus, Alex,
A Barbed Gift of the Backwoods: Gramsci's Sardinian Beginnings, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 1 - 5
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020060, livello=E1, titolo=A Barbed Gift of the Backwoods, sottotitolo=Gramsci's Sardinian Beginnings, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Loftus, Alex, Kipfer, Stefan, Hart , Gillian, Ekers, Michael], autorevoc=[Loftus, Alex, Kipfer, Stefan, Hart , Gillian, Ekers, Michael], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007581, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-006328, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007777, IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-007500], responsability_ruolo=[author, author, author, author], first_author=Loftus, Alex, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=This chapter refers to Tim Nairn's essay "Antonu Su Gobbu" in his book Approaches to Gramsci. Nairn says of Antonio Gramsci that "He was a barbed gift of the backwoods to the metropolis, and some aspects of his originality always reflected this difference." Together with John Berger's letter to Subcomandante Marcos about Gramsci's Sardinian birthplace, the mural of the young Gramsci's journey to a new political and intellectual life in the industrial heart of Italy frames Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics. John Berger's vivid meditation on Gramsci and Sardinia captures the key themes that tie the essays in this volume together. For Berger, Gramsci's political patience stems from his experiences of the Sardinian landscape. There is also a deep appreciation of Gramsci's relational style of historical materialism, which informs the introduction to the collection that follows Berger's piece and many of the contributions comprising Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[1], relazioni_end=[5], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Materialismo Storico, Sardegna], subjectvoc=[Historical materialism, Sardinia], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020060, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]
Berger, John,
How to Live with Stones, in Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics, pp. 6 - 11
SolrDocument[{id=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020061, livello=E1, titolo=How to Live with Stones, sottotitolo=, tipo_titolo=, responsability_namePart=[Berger, John], autorevoc=[Berger, John], responsability_codice=[IT-GRAMSCI-EACCPF0001-000730], responsability_ruolo=[author], first_author=Berger, John, forma_parallela=, responsability=, note_edizione_traduzione=, luogo_pubblicazione=, editore=, forma_visualizzata=, forma_normalizzata=, tipo_data=, consistenza=, lingua=[eng], paese=[GB], abstract=Antonio Gramsci is arguably the least dogmatic of our century's thinkers about revolution. Gramsci's special patience came from a sense of practice, which will never end. He saw close-up, and sometimes directed, the political struggles of his time, but he never forgot the background of an unfolding drama whose span covers incalculable ages. Gramsci went to school, from the age of 6 until 12, in the small town of Ghilarza in central Sardinia. When Gramsci was four, he fell to the floor as he was being carried, and this accident led to a spinal malformation, which permanently undermined his health. He did not leave Sardinia until he was 20. In the hinterland around Ghilarza, as in many parts of the island, the thing one feels most strongly is the presence of stones. The island probably gave Gramsci or inspired in him his special sense of time., table_contents=, titolo_collana=, collocazione=, relazioni_titolo_collegato=[Ekers, Michael, Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics], relazioni_identificativo=[IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020042], relazioni_tipo_relazione=[padre], relazioni_numero_volume=[], relazioni_numero_issue=[], relazioni_start=[6], relazioni_end=[11], relazioni_pagine=[], relazioni_forma_visualizzata=[2013], relazioni_forma_normalizzata=[20130101-20131231], relazioni_tipo_data=[], relazioni_luogo=[Oxford], relazioni_editore=[Wiley-Blackwell], relazioni_paese=[GB], soggettivoc=[Filosofia della praxis, Sardegna], subjectvoc=[Sardinia, Philosophy of praxis], note_riservate=, source=IGS-Int_2013, recordInfo=, identifier=IT-GRAMSCI-BIB00001-0020061, recordOrigin=, condizioni_accesso=public, dateIssued=20130101-20131231}]