Article contents
Abstract
- Type
- Review Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983
References
1 Gouldner, Alvin W., The Two Marxisms: Contradictions and Anomalies in the Development of Theory (London: Macmillan, 1980), p. 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Gouldner, , The Two Marxisms, p. 130.Google Scholar
3 Kolakowski, Leszek, ‘Antonio Gramsci: Communist Revisionism’, in Main Currents of Marxism, Vol. III (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1978), p. 226.Google Scholar
4 Selections from the Prison Notebooks of Antonio Gramsci (hereafter abbreviated to SPN), edited and translated by Hoare, Quintin and Smith, Geoffrey Nowell (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1971), p. 384.Google Scholar Whenever possible, quotations from Gramsci's writings will be taken from existing English translations. Much of his work, however, has not yet been translated.
5 Il materialismo storico e la filosofia di Benedetto Croce (hereafter MS), Volume I, Quaderni del carcere (Turin: Einaudi, 1948), p. 250.Google Scholar
6 MS, p. 199.Google Scholar
7 In Il Grido del Popolo, 29 01 1916Google Scholar; Antonio Gramsci, Selections from Political Writings (1910–1920) (hereafter SPW I), translated and edited by Hoare, Quintin and Mathews, John (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1977), pp. 11–13.Google Scholar
8 History, Philosophy and Culture in the Young Gramsci (hereafter HPC), edited by Cavalcanti, Pedro and Piccone, Paul (St Louis: Telos Press. 1975), pp. 41–2.Google Scholar
9 See Adamson, Walter L., Hegemony and Revolution: Antonio Gramsd's Political and Cultural Theory (Berkeley: University of California Press. 1980), pp. 33–4, 253.Google Scholar
10 SPW I, pp. 34–5.Google Scholar
11 ‘Our Marx’, Il Grido del Popolo, 4 05 1918Google Scholar; HPC, p. 10.Google Scholar
12 ‘Mysteries of Poetry and Culture’, Il Grido del Popolo, 19 10 1918Google Scholar; HPC, p. 18.Google Scholar
13 ‘The Conquest of the State’, L'Ordine Nuovo, 12 07 1919Google Scholar; SPW I, p. 75.Google Scholar
14 In an article of 29 January 1918 (‘Achille Loria e il socialismo’, in Avanti!), Gramsci referred to Labriola in glowing terms. The article is reprinted in Scritti giovanili, 1914–1918 (Turin: Einaudi, 1958), pp. 162–3.Google Scholar On 5 January 1918, he published a short excerpt from Labriola's main work, Essays on the Materialist Conception of History, in Il Grido del Popolo. Much later, in the Notebooks, Gramsci praises Labriola as ‘the only man who has attempted to build up the philosophy of praxis (Marxism) scientifically’. (SPN, p. 387.)Google Scholar
15 MS, p. 200.Google Scholar
16 MS, pp. 179–80.Google Scholar
17 MS, pp. 201–2.Google Scholar
18 MS, p. 199.Google Scholar
19 SPN, p. 371.Google Scholar
20 MS, p. 233.Google Scholar
21 SPN, p. 356Google Scholar; MS, pp. 215–17, 190–1, 204, 237.Google Scholar
22 SPN, p. 352.Google Scholar
23 SPN, p. 355.Google Scholar
24 SPN, p. 455.Google Scholar
25 SPN pp 445–6Google Scholar
26 SPN, pp. 467, 34.Google Scholar
27 SPN, p. 346.Google Scholar
28 SPN, p. 467.Google Scholar
29 SPN, p. 375.Google Scholar
30 SPN, p. 456.Google Scholar
31 SPN p 371.Google Scholar
32 SPN, p. 465.Google Scholar
33 SPN, p. 345Google Scholar; MS, pp. 55–6.Google Scholar
34 SPN, pp. 426, 438–9, 442Google Scholar; MS, p. 56.Google Scholar
35 SPN, p. 407.Google Scholar
36 SPN, p. 168.Google Scholar
37 MS, pp. 236–7.Google Scholar
38 MS, p. 230.Google Scholar
39 MS, p. 237.Google Scholar
40 SPN, pp. 139–40, my emphasis.Google Scholar
41 Hegemony and Revolution, p. 203.Google Scholar
42 SPN, p. 408.Google Scholar
43 MS, p. 230.Google Scholar
44 Hegemony and Revolution, p. 218.Google Scholar
45 ‘Gramsci e la concezione della società civile’, Gramsci e la cultura contemporanea, Vol. I, edited by Rossi, Pietro (Rome: Editori Riuniti, 1969), p. 881.Google Scholar
46 SPN, p. 139, my emphasis.Google Scholar
47 SPN.
48 SPN, p. 168.Google Scholar
49 MS p. 233.Google Scholar
50 SPN, p. 168.Google Scholar
51 SPN, p. 194.Google Scholar
52 SPN, p. 161.Google Scholar
53 SPN, p. 258.Google Scholar
54 SPN, p. 466; see, also, pp. 180–1, 432 and Passato e presente (hereafter PP), Vol. 6Google Scholar, Quaderni del carcere (Turin: Einaudi, 1951), p. 201.Google Scholar
55 Engels's letter to Bloch, J., 21 09 1890Google Scholar; Marx, K. and Engels, F., Selected Correspondence (New York: International Publishers, 1942), p. 475.Google Scholar
56 ‘Political Capacity’, Avanti!, 24 09 1920Google Scholar (SPW I, p. 348)Google Scholar; and SPN, p. 178Google Scholar. See, also, MS, pp. 211–15, 272–3.Google Scholar
57 SPN, p. 184.Google Scholar
58 SPN, pp. 437–8.Google Scholar
59 ‘Against Pessimism’, L'Ordine Nuovo, 15 03 1924Google Scholar; Antonio Gramsci, Selections from Political Writings (1921–1926) (hereafter SPW II), translated and edited by Hoare, Quintin (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1978), p. 213.Google Scholar
60 Labriola, Antonio, Essays on the Materialist Conception of History, translated by Kerr, C. H. (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 1908), p. 124Google Scholar. Labriola, too, criticized those who interpret Marxism as a ‘final’ rationalization and schematization of history; ‘our doctrine cannot serve to represent the whole history of the human race in a unified perspective … Our doctrine does not pretend to be the intellectual vision of a great plan or of a design’ (Essays on the Materialist Conception of History, p. 135)Google Scholar. Yet, he believed that communism ‘must inevitably happen by the immanent necessity of history’ (p. 244). On this point, then, Gramsci parted company with his mentor.
61 SPN, p. 465.Google Scholar
62 SPN, pp. 336–7, 342.Google Scholar
63 SPN, p. 428.Google Scholar
64 SPN; see, also, Letteratura e vita nazionale, Vol. 5, Quaderni del carcere (Turin: Einaudi, 1950), p. 6.Google Scholar
65 SPN, pp. 200–1.Google Scholar
66 SPN, pp. 410–12, 428.Google Scholar
67 Letter from prison to his sister-in-law, 30 May 1932; Letters from Prison by Antonio Gramsci, selected and translated by Lawner, Lynne (New York: Harper and Row, 1973), pp. 239–41.Google Scholar
68 Lukács, Georg, History and Class Consciousness, translated by Livingstone, R. (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1971), pp. 177–8, 197–8.Google Scholar
69 SPN, p. 426.Google Scholar
70 SPN, pp. 428–9.Google Scholar
71 SPN, p. 133.Google Scholar
72 MS, pp. 199–200.Google Scholar
73 SPN, pp. 396, 393.Google Scholar
74 MS, p. 232.Google Scholar
75 MS.
76 SPN, pp. 201, 404–7Google Scholar; PP, p. 201.Google Scholar
77 SPN, pp. 133, 360, 355.Google Scholar
78 SPN, pp. 172–3.Google Scholar
79 ‘Antonio Gramsci: Communist Revisionism’, p. 228.Google Scholar
80 SPN, pp. 371, 417.Google Scholar
81 SPN, p. 436.Google Scholar
82 SPN, p. 445.Google Scholar
83 SPN, p. 348.Google Scholar
84 SPN, p. 341.Google Scholar
85 SPN, p. 369.Google Scholar
86 SPN, p. 436.Google Scholar
87 MS, pp. 55–6.Google Scholar
88 SPN, pp. 138, 405.Google Scholar
89 SPN, p. 407.Google Scholar
90 SPN, pp. 406–7.Google Scholar
91 SPN, p. 465.Google Scholar
92 Karl Marx, Selected Writings in Sociology and Social Philosophy, edited by Bottomore, T. B. and Rubel, Maximilian (Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1961), p. 82.Google Scholar
93 ‘The Great Gramsci’, New York Review of Books (4 04 1974), p. 41.Google Scholar
94 SPN, p. 57.Google Scholar
95 SPN, p. 12.Google Scholar
96 SPN.
97 SPN, pp. 226, 227–8, 238, 243.Google Scholar
98 SPN, p. 263Google Scholar; see pp. 239, 244 as well.
99 SPN, pp. 60–1.Google Scholar
100 SPN, pp. 326–7.Google Scholar
101 SPN, p. 333, my emphasis.Google Scholar
102 SPN, pp. 333, 327.Google Scholar
103 SPN, p. 238.Google Scholar
104 SPN, p. 243.Google Scholar
105 SPN, p. 235.Google Scholar
106 SPN, p. 238.Google Scholar
107 MS, p. 236Google Scholar; SPN, p. 57.Google Scholar
108 See, e.g. Tamburrano, Giuseppe, Antonio Gramsci: la vita, il pensiero, l'azione (Bari: Laterza 1963), pp. 257–9, 267, 284–97.Google Scholar
109 SPN, pp. 192–3, 221Google Scholar; MS, p. 159Google Scholar; PP, p. 158.Google Scholar
110 SPN, p. 243.Google Scholar
111 SPN, p. 185, my emphasis.Google Scholar
112 MS, pp. 184, 219–22.Google Scholar
113 SPN, pp 167–8, 198.Google Scholar
114 SPN, p. 198Google Scholar; see pp. 84–5 as well.
115 Salvadori, Massimo, ‘Gramsci and the PCI: two Conceptions of Hegemony’ in Gramsci and Marxist Theory, edited by Mouffe, Chantal (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979), p. 257.Google Scholar
116 ‘Workers' Democracy’ (21 01 1919)Google Scholar in SPW I, pp. 65–8Google Scholar; ‘The Conquest of the State’ (12 07 1919)Google Scholar in SPW I, pp. 73–8Google Scholar; ‘Unions and Councils’ (11 10 1919)Google Scholar in SPW I, pp. 98–102.Google Scholar
117 ‘The Conquest of the State’, SPW I, pp. 74–5Google Scholar; ‘The Factory Council’ (5 06 1920)Google Scholar in SPW I, pp. 260–1.Google Scholar
118 ‘Unions and Councils’, SPW I, p. 100.Google Scholar
119 ‘Political Capacity’ (24 09 1920)Google Scholar, SPW I, p. 348.Google Scholar
120 Letter to Togliatti, (9 02 1924)Google Scholar in SPW II, pp. 197–8.Google Scholar
121 ‘Lyons Theses’ (01 1926)Google Scholar in SPW II, p. 360.Google Scholar
122 Handwritten notes, in SPW II, p. 154.Google Scholar
123 PCI statement (1925)Google Scholar, in SPW II, p. 290Google Scholar; ‘Lyons Theses’. SPW II, pp. 364–5.Google Scholar
124 SPN, p. 5.Google Scholar
125 SPN, p. 97.Google Scholar
126 SPN, pp. 6–7.Google Scholar
127 SPN, pp. 125–33.Google Scholar
128 SPN, pp. 152–3.Google Scholar
129 SPN, p. 421.Google Scholar
130 SPN, p. 200.Google Scholar
131 Note sul Machiavelli, sulla politica, e sullo stato moderno (hereafter Mach.) Vol. 4, Quaderni del carcere (Turin: Einaudi, 1949), p. 113.Google Scholar
132 SPN, p. 350.Google Scholar
133 Mach., p. 157.Google Scholar
134 SPN, pp. 188–90.Google Scholar
135 SPN, pp. 116–17, my emphasis.Google Scholar
136 SPN, pp. 40, 186, 193–4.Google Scholar
137 SPN, pp. 260, 263, 382.Google Scholar
138 Mach., pp. 150–1.Google Scholar
139 PP, p. 65.Google Scholar
140 Bates, Thomas R., ‘Antonio Gramsci and the Bolshevization of the PCI’, Journal of Contemporary History, XI (07 1976), p. 116.Google Scholar
141 Mach., p. 134.Google Scholar
142 Therborn, Goran, Science, Class and Society (London: New Left Books, 1976), p. 38.Google Scholar
143 There is no space here to give details of the various findings. For such details, see my Gramsci's Political Thought (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1981), Chapter 7.Google Scholar
144 SPN, p. 333.Google Scholar
145 SPN, p. 311.Google Scholar
146 PP, p. 158.Google Scholar
147 Gli intellettuali e l'organizzazione della cultura, Vol. 2, Quaderni del carcere (Turin: Einaudi, 1949), p. 124.Google Scholar
148 SPN, p. 341.Google Scholar
149 SPN, p. 346.Google Scholar
150 SPN, p. 348.Google Scholar
151 SPN, p. 369.Google Scholar
152 SPN, p. 341.Google Scholar
153 Unlike most Marxists of his time, Gramsci defended the merits of formal logic. See PP, pp. 162–3Google Scholar; and MS, pp. 59–62.Google Scholar
154 Interview with Pellicani, Luciano, Il Popolo, 20 02 1977Google Scholar; reprinted in Oltre Gramsci, edited by Belci, Corrado (Rome: Cinque Lune, 1977), pp. 138–9Google Scholar. The quotations are taken from Pellicani, but he speaks for many who reject Gramsci's patrimony. See, also, Pellicani, L., Gramsci e la questione comunista (Florence: Vallecchi, 1976).Google Scholar
- 9
- Cited by