Bianchi, Alvaro - Aliaga, Luciana

Força e consenso como fundamentos do Estado: Pareto e Gramsci

fa parte di Revista Brasileira de Ciência Política , 5 , Brasília : Instituto de Ciência Política da Universidade de Brasília , Jan./July 2011 , pp. 17 - 36

The definition of politics by means of the fierce and human attribute of the Machiavellian Centaurus - power and consensus as the foundations of the State - is present both in Gramsci's political thought in order to characterize the modern State and in Pareto's sociology in view of distinguishing governing elites. The authors, nevertheless, are close to Machiavelli in very different ways. Whereas Gramsci "updates" Machiavelli's realism associating it to Marxism and applying it to contemporaneous issues, in Pareto it is evident a very close adherence to the very wording of Machiavelli's writings. Despite the coincidence of their Machiavellian source, the authors' different readings regarding the relationships between power and consensus will lead to antagonistic perspectives about politics and social stability.

Available online: Força e consenso como fundamentos do Estado: Pareto e Gramsci (Accessed December 07, 2016)

Lingua por
Nomi [author] Bianchi, Alvaro
[author] Aliaga, Luciana
Soggetti
Consenso
Machiavelli, Niccolò
Pareto, Vilfredo
Consensus
Machiavelli, Niccolò
Pareto, Vilfredo