Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) was an Italian Marxist philosopher, journalist, and political organiser. He was born in Sardinia, the island off the coast of Italy, into a poor family and grew up in significant poverty. He won a scholarship to the University of Turin, where he became involved in socialist politics. He was one of the founders of the Italian Communist Party in 1921 and became its leader. When Mussolini's fascist government came to power, Gramsci was arrested in 1926 and sentenced to twenty years in prison. The fascist prosecutor famously said at his trial: we must prevent this brain from functioning for twenty years. The effort failed. In prison, Gramsci wrote the Prison Notebooks, a collection of philosophical and political reflections covering more than three thousand pages, which he smuggled out in fragments and which were published after his death. He died in prison in 1937, aged 46, his health destroyed by years of harsh imprisonment. The Prison Notebooks were eventually published in the 1950s and became one of the most important works of political philosophy of the twentieth century.
Gramsci matters because he developed one of the most important tools for understanding how power works in modern societies: the concept of hegemony. He showed that dominant groups maintain their power not primarily through force, though force is always in the background, but through the more subtle and more effective means of making their worldview seem like common sense. When people accept the values, assumptions, and ways of thinking of the powerful as natural, obvious, and simply the way things are, they are living inside a hegemony. Recognising hegemony, naming it, and developing alternative ways of thinking, is a form of political resistance. Gramsci also developed the concept of the organic intellectual: the person who emerges from and remains accountable to their community, helping that community understand its situation and develop the intellectual tools it needs to change it. This concept remains essential for thinking about the role of education, media, and culture in political life.
The best starting point is a short introduction to Gramsci's key concepts rather than the Prison Notebooks themselves, which are dense and fragmentary.
An Introduction (1991, Lawrence and Wishart) is the most accessible introduction.
Giuseppe Fiori's Antonio Gramsci: Life of a Revolutionary (1970, Schocken) is engaging and readable. The concept of hegemony is explained clearly in Stuart Hall's essay Gramsci's Relevance for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, freely available online.
Selections from the Prison Notebooks, edited by Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith (1971, International Publishers), is the standard English translation and is more manageable than the complete notebooks. For the contemporary relevance of hegemony: Stuart Hall's The Hard Road to Renewal (1988, Verso) applies Gramscian analysis to Thatcherite Britain in ways that illuminate the concept clearly. Chantal Mouffe's edited collection Gramsci and Marxist Theory (1979, Routledge) provides the most rigorous scholarly assessment of his contributions.
Gramsci's concept of hegemony means that everything is controlled by a secret conspiracy of the powerful.
Gramsci's hegemony is almost the opposite of a conspiracy. A conspiracy requires active coordination and intention. Hegemony works precisely because it does not require either: it operates through the uncoordinated actions of thousands of people who have genuinely internalised a particular worldview and reproduce it naturally in their daily work and life. A teacher who has absorbed certain assumptions about what is normal and natural teaches those assumptions without realising it. A journalist who shares the common sense of their class reproduces it without intending to. Hegemony is effective because it does not feel like power: it feels like common sense.
Gramsci believed that culture and ideas are just reflections of economic interests.
This was actually the view that Gramsci was arguing against within Marxist thought. Orthodox Marxism held that economic base determines cultural superstructure: culture, ideas, and institutions simply reflect the underlying economic interests of the dominant class. Gramsci argued that this was too simple: ideas and culture have their own relative independence and can, in turn, shape economic and political reality. This is why the war of position, the struggle for cultural and ideological hegemony, matters: it is not simply a reflection of economic power but a form of power in its own right.
Gramsci's ideas are only relevant to European or Western political contexts.
Gramsci's concepts of hegemony, organic intellectuals, and counter-hegemony have been applied across many different contexts worldwide. Postcolonial thinkers including Stuart Hall and Homi Bhabha have applied hegemony to the analysis of colonial and postcolonial power. Latin American liberation theologians drew on Gramsci in developing their analysis of poverty and cultural power. Feminist scholars have applied hegemony to the analysis of gender. His framework has proven valuable wherever the question is how dominant groups maintain power through cultural means.
Gramsci believed that ordinary people are passive victims of hegemony who cannot think for themselves.
Gramsci had a deep respect for the intellectual capacity of ordinary people, as his statement that all people are intellectuals makes clear. He was interested in organic intellectuals precisely because he believed that oppressed groups could and did produce their own thinkers and their own cultures. His concept of common sense acknowledges that people hold complex, often contradictory mixtures of hegemonic and potentially counter-hegemonic ideas. The work of political and cultural change, in his view, is to develop and extend the critical elements that already exist in ordinary people's thinking, not to introduce consciousness from outside.
The complete Prison Notebooks in the Columbia University Press translation (3 volumes) is the primary text for advanced study.
Homi Bhabha's The Location of Culture (1994, Routledge) draws on Gramsci in developing postcolonial cultural theory.
Christine Buci-Glucksmann's Gramsci and the State (1980) develops a feminist reading of Gramsci.
Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe's Hegemony and Socialist Strategy (1985, Verso) is the most important theoretical development of Gramsci's ideas in the late twentieth century.
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