Kate Crehan applies Antonio Gramsci's concepts of subalternity, intellectuals, and common sense to offer new ways to understand the many forms that structural inequality can take and the relationships between the experience of inequality, exploitation, and oppression as well as the construction of political narratives.
Kate Crehan applies Antonio Gramsci's concepts of subalternity, intellectuals, and common sense to offer new ways to understand the many forms that structural inequality can take and the relationships between the experience of inequality, exploitation, and oppression as well as the construction of political narratives.
Preface ix Abbreviations xv Part I. Subalternity, Intellectuals, and Common Sense 1. Subalternity 3 2. Intellectuals 18 3. Common Sense 43 4. What Subalterns Know 59 Part II. Case Studies 5. Adam Smith: A Bourgeois, Organic Intellectual? 81 6. The Common Sense of the Tea Party 118 7. Common Sense, Good Sense, and Occupy 146 Conclusion. Reading Gramsci in the Twenty-First Century 184 Bibliography 199 Index 207
Preface ix Abbreviations xv Part I. Subalternity, Intellectuals, and Common Sense 1. Subalternity 3 2. Intellectuals 18 3. Common Sense 43 4. What Subalterns Know 59 Part II. Case Studies 5. Adam Smith: A Bourgeois, Organic Intellectual? 81 6. The Common Sense of the Tea Party 118 7. Common Sense, Good Sense, and Occupy 146 Conclusion. Reading Gramsci in the Twenty-First Century 184 Bibliography 199 Index 207
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