Martin, James
Morbid Symptoms: Gramsci and the Crisis of Liberalism
In common with other educated observes in the interwar period, Antonio Gramsci believed he was living through an epochal transformation of modern cultural and political life. This, in his view, amounted to a wholesale breach with the liberal-capitalist order that had held sway over much of Western Europe since the late 19th century. The social organization of human freedom and solidarity was now being substantially recast. Italy's circumstances represented only a partiular variant of the wider crisis of parlamientary politics and the elite values and practices that supported them.
Lingua | eng |
Nomi |
[author] Martin, James |
Soggetti |
Quaderni del carcere
Marxismo
Prison Notebooks
Marxism |