Zucchetti, Emilio - Cimino, Anna Maria
Antonio Gramsci and the Ancient World
Edited By Emilio Zucchetti, Anna Maria Cimino
London: Routledge, 2021, 402
Antonio Gramsci and the Ancient World explores the relationship between the work of the Italian Marxist thinker Antonio Gramsci and the study of classical antiquity.
The collection of essays engages with Greek and Roman history, literature, society, and culture, offering a range of perspectives and approaches building on Gramsci's theoretical insights, especially from his Prison Notebooks. The volume investigates both Gramsci's understanding and reception of the ancient world, including his use of ancient sources and modern historiography, and the viability of applying some of his key theoretical insights to the study of Greek and Roman history and literature. The chapters deal with the ideas of hegemony, passive revolution, Caesarism, and the role of intellectuals in society, offering a complex and diverse exploration of this intersection.
With its fascinating mixture of topics, this volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of classics, ancient history, classical reception studies, Marxism and history, and those studying Antonio Gramsci's works in particular.
List of Figures and Tables
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: The Reception of Gramsci's Thought in Historical and Classical Studies
Emilio Zucchetti
1. Negotiating Hegemony in Early Greek Poetry
Laura Swift
2. Upside-down Hegemony? Ideology and Power in Ancient Athens
Mirko Canevaro
3. Gramsci and Ancient Philosophy: Prelude to a Study
Phillip Sidney Horky
4. A Gramscian Approach to Ancient Slavery
Kostas Vlassopoulos
5. The Etruscan Question. An Academic Controversy in the Prison Notebooks
Massimiliano Di Fazio
6. Polybios and the Rise of Rome. Gramscian Hegemony, Intellectuals and Passive Revolution
Emma Nicholson
7. Antonio Gramsci Between Ancient and Modern Imperialism
Michele Bellomo
8. Plebeian Tribunes and Cosmopolitan Intellectuals: Gramsci's Approach to the Late Roman Republic
Mattia Balbo
9. Between Caesarism and Cosmopolitanism: Julius Caesar as an Historical Problem in Gramsci
Federico Santangelo
10. Gramsci and the Roman Cultural Revolution
Christopher Smith
11. Caesarism as Stasis from Gramsci to Lucan: an "Equilibrium with Catastrophic Prospects"
Elena Giusti
12. Hegemony in the Roman Principate: Perceptions of Power in Gramsci, Tacitus and Luke
Jeremy Paterson
13. Gramsci's View of Late Antiquity: between longue durée and Discontinuity
Dario Nappo
14. Cultural Hegemonies, NIE-orthodoxy', and Social Development Models: Classicists' Organic' Approaches to Economic History in the Early XXI Century
Cristiano Viglietti
Afterthoughts
1. The Author as Intellectual? Hints and Thoughts for a Gramscian Re-reading' of the Ancient Literatures
Anna Maria Cimino
2. Hegemony, Coercion and Consensus: A Gramscian Approach to Greek Cultural and Political History
Alberto Esu
3. Hegemony, Ideology, and Ancient History. Notes towards a Development of an Intersectional Framework
Emilio Zucchetti
General Index
Index of the Ancient Sources
Index of Gramsci's Texts
Lingua | eng |
Nomi |
[curatore] Zucchetti, Emilio [curatore] Cimino, Anna Maria |
Soggetti |
Classicità (Di Gramsci)
Classicity
|