This book will offer a full reconstruction of the history of Theoretical Marxism in Italy between 1895 and 1935, based on a rigorous philological method. The starting term (1895) is marked by the publication of Antonio Labriola's first essay on historical materialism (In memory of Communist Manifesto); the final term coincides with the conclusion of the "Prison Notebooks" written by Antonio Gramsci. This book analyses the original character of the Marxist philosophy in Italy, which emerged by distinguishing itself from the "orthodoxy" of the Second and Third International. By delineating a significant chapter in the history of Marxism, the book will also propose a specific contribution to the history of Italian Philosophy, which is here studied in relation to the developments of European philosophy, beyond the traditional subdivisions of Positivism, Idealism and Marxism.
Historical materialism as 'canon' and the 'elliptical comparison'
Utility and praxis
3. Giovanni Gentile
Between Labriola and Croce
The critique of historical materialism and 'praxis overturned'
Autopraxis
'Feeling' as praxis
4. Rodolfo Mondolfo
Marx and Feuerbach
Friedrich Engels and historical materialism
Lenin and the Russian revolution
Mondolfo and Gramsci
Part II. Antonio Gramsci
5. The Philosophy Notes
Preliminary Considerations
Gramsci's return to Labriola
The overturning of praxis (Gramsci and Marx)
From Marx to Hegel
The 'historical bloc'
Materialism and idealism: the reality of the outside world
Common sense
The provisional nature of the philosophy of praxis
Translatability
6. The Notes on Dante
The Cavalcante code
The eleven notes on Dante
Poetry and structure
Aesthetics and catharsis
7. The Anti-Croce
Preliminary remarks on the 'Special' Notebooks
Early considerations on the History of Europe, the origins of the Anti-Croce
Hegemony of Croce?
The 'dialectic of the distinct'
The speculative 'reside' and fate of philosophy
8. Praxis
Hegemony and criticism
Intellectuals
The Modern Prince
Marcello Mustè is Associate Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. He is a member of the Scientific Council of the “Gramsci Foundation.” His recent studies are addressed to the philosophy of Italian Marxism and in particular to the work of Antonio Gramsci.
This book will offer a full reconstruction of the history of Theoretical Marxism in Italy between 1895 and 1935, based on a rigorous philological method. The starting term (1895) is marked by the publication of Antonio Labriola's first essay on historical materialism (In memory of Communist Manifesto); the final term coincides with the conclusion of the "Prison Notebooks" written by Antonio Gramsci. This book analyses the original character of the Marxist philosophy in Italy, which emerged by distinguishing itself from the "orthodoxy" of the Second and Third International. By delineating a significant chapter in the history of Marxism, the book will also propose a specific contribution to the history of Italian Philosophy, which is here studied in relation to the developments of European philosophy, beyond the traditional subdivisions of Positivism, Idealism and Marxism.
Marcello Mustè is Associate professor of Theoretical Philosophy at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy.