Gramsci Dictionary
A Study of His Most Profound Concepts and Ideas: Antonio Gramsci Is Everywhere Today and Yet Rarely Understood (Dictionaries of Philosophy and Great Thinkers)
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Narrated by:
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Brian Leonard's voice replica
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By:
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Isaac Volpe
This title uses a narrator's voice replica
Summary
Antonio Gramsci is everywhere today and yet rarely understood.
Words like hegemony, civil society, organic intellectuals, war of position, and interregnum circulate daily in politics, media, and cultural debate. But what do they really mean? Where do they come from? And why do they still matter? This book is not a conventional introduction, nor a simplified guide. It is a conceptual compass for navigating Gramsci’s thought with rigor, clarity, and historical depth. Built as a carefully structured dictionary of 100 key concepts drawn from the Prison Notebooks, this book restores Gramsci’s ideas to their original tension: political, cultural, strategic, and alive.
Each entry offers
• a precise, accessible definition
• contextual explanation grounded in Gramsci’s historical moment
• selected quotations that preserve the force of the original thought
This book is designed for listeners who refuse slogans and shortcuts. For students, researchers, journalists, educators, activists, and critical listeners who sense that power today operates less through force and more through culture, language, education, and consent. Written under fascist imprisonment, Gramsci’s ideas were forged to explain why revolutions fail, how domination persists, and what long-term struggle really means. In an age of polarization, cultural warfare, and political exhaustion, his thought feels uncannily contemporary Buy it now and turn confusion into clarity.
Listen to it to sharpen your political and cultural intelligence.
Keep it as a reference, you’ll come back to whenever power disguises itself as common sense.
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