scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Selections from the prison notebooks of Antonio Gramsci

TLDR
The first selection published from Gramsci's Prison Notebooks to be made available in Britain, and was originally published in the early 1970s as discussed by the authors, was the first publication of the Notebooks in the UK.
Abstract
Antonio Gramsci's Prison Notebooks, written between 1929 and 1935, are the work of one of the most original thinkers in twentieth century Europe. Gramsci has had a profound influence on debates about the relationship between politics and culture. His complex and fruitful approach to questions of ideology, power and change remains crucial for critical theory. This volume was the first selection published from the Notebooks to be made available in Britain, and was originally published in the early 1970s. It contains the most important of Gramsci's notebooks, including the texts of The Modern Prince, and Americanism and Fordism, and extensive notes on the state and civil society, Italian history and the role of intellectuals. 'Far the best informative apparatus available to any foreign language readership of Gramsci.' Perry Anderson, New Left Review 'A model of scholarship' New Statesman

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The demise of the national union in italy: lessons for comparative industrial relations theory

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the reorganization of the auto industry in Italy is presented, where the authors focus on micro-level developments and the politics of strategic choice to explain variation within nations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The geographies of food banks in the meantime

TL;DR: The authors trace alternative understandings of food banks as spaces of care, and as liminal spaces of encounter capable of incubating political and ethical values, practices and subjectivities that challenge neoliberal austerity.
Book

Racisms: An Introduction

Steve Garner
TL;DR: This paper defined race, racism, institutional racism, and racialization, and provided examples of how these function in fields like the natural sciences and asylum seeking, and set out theoretical arguments around collective identities ('race', class, gender, nation, religion').
Journal ArticleDOI

Ideology, Hegemony, Discourse: A Critical Review of Theories of Knowledge and Power

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the movement from this concept of ideology to models of hegemony and discourse, and then trace a second set of ruptures in theories of ideology, hegemony, and discourse.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Politics of Development Policy Labelling

Geof Wood
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the particular kind of labels or abstractions which arise in development policy areas as an aspect of the donative political discorse associated with the 3rd world development agenda.