When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Antonio Gramsci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Gramsci

    Antonio Francesco Gramsci (UK: / ˈ ɡ r æ m ʃ i / GRAM-shee, [2] US: / ˈ ɡ r ɑː m ʃ i / GRAHM-shee; [3] Italian: [anˈtɔːnjo franˈtʃesko ˈɡramʃi] ⓘ; 22 January 1891 – 27 April 1937) was an Italian Marxist philosopher, linguist, journalist, writer, and politician.

  3. Prison Notebooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prison_Notebooks

    Gramsci stated that, in the West, bourgeois cultural values were tied to religion, and therefore much of his polemic against hegemonic culture is aimed at religious norms and values. He was impressed by the power Roman Catholicism had over men's minds and the care the Church had taken to prevent an excessive gap developing between the religion ...

  4. Cultural hegemony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_hegemony

    To perceive and combat ruling-class cultural hegemony, the working class and the peasant class depend upon the moral and political leadership of their native intelligentsia, the scholars, academics, and teachers, scientists, philosophers, administrators et al. from their specific social classes; thus Gramsci's political distinction between the ...

  5. Marxist cultural analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marxist_cultural_analysis

    Gramsci is best known for his theory of cultural hegemony, which describes how cultural institutions function to maintain the status of the ruling class. In Gramsci's view, hegemony is maintained by ideology; that is, without need for violence, economic force, or coercion.

  6. Subaltern (postcolonialism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subaltern_(postcolonialism)

    In discussions of the meaning of the term subaltern in the work of Gramsci, Spivak said that he used the word as a synonym for the proletariat (a code word to deceive the prison censor to allow his manuscripts out the prison), [5] but contemporary evidence indicates that the term was a novel concept in Gramsci's political theory. [6]

  7. Italian road to socialism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_road_to_socialism

    Antonio Gramsci, secretary of the Italian Communist Party from 1924 to 1927. The roots of the Italian road to socialism were in Antonio Gramsci 's Prison Notebooks , in particular his considerations regarding historical materialism , the Unification of Italy , the role of intellectuals in society and the political party seen as the modern ...

  8. Organic crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_crisis

    Organic crisis, structural crisis, regime crisis or hegemony crisis is a concept that defines the situation in which a social, political and economic system as a whole finds itself in a scenario of instability because its institutions have lost credibility and legitimacy before the citizenry.

  9. Counterhegemony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterhegemony

    "Hegemony" was conceptualized by Karl Marx and Antonio Gramsci, a Marxist social philosopher who lived in Mussolini's Italy. Because Gramsci was a Marxist, he subscribed to the basic Marxist premise of the dialectic and therefore the contradiction. In his writings Gramsci claims that intellectuals create both hegemony and counter-hegemony.