Antonio Gramsci and the Ancient World (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Zucchetti, Emilio; Cimino, Anna Maria
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Antonio Gramsci and the Ancient World (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Zucchetti, Emilio; Cimino, Anna Maria
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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.
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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.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 402
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429513787
- Artikelnr.: 61672552
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 402
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429513787
- Artikelnr.: 61672552
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Emilio Zucchetti is Germanicus Scholar of the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (London, UK) and Teaching Assistant at Newcastle University, UK. Anna Maria Cimino is a PhD student in Classics at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy.
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)
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)
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)
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)