ABSTRACT
This edited volume provides a coherent and comprehensive assessment of Antonio Gramsci's significant contribution to the fields of political and cultural theory. It contains seminal contributions from a broad range of important political and cultural theorists from around the world and explains the origins, development and context for Gramsci's thought as well as analysing his continued relevance and influence to contemporary debates.
It demonstrates the multidisciplinary nature of Gramscian thought to produce new insights into the intersection of economic, political, cultural, and social processes, and to create a vital resource for readers across the disciplines of political theory, cultural studies, political economy, philosophy, and subaltern studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |44 pages
Culture and Criticism
part |124 pages
Hegemony, Subalternity, Common Sense
chapter |22 pages
Gramsci Cannot Speak
chapter |15 pages
Self-Consciousness of the Dalits as “Subalterns”
chapter |20 pages
Social Forces in the Struggle over Hegemony
part |90 pages
Political Philosophy
chapter |12 pages
From Marx to Gramsci, from Gramsci to Marx
part |39 pages
On Gramsci's Prison Notebooks