Hegemony in Trotsky's Thought: From Hegemonic Power to Theory of Revolution
Hegemony in the analysis of world domination
Crisis of the British Empire and the rise of US hegemony
Versailles and Frances' "unstable hegemony"
The law of productivity and the "theoretical model" of hegemonic power
Hegemony in the theory of revolution
Lenin: hegemony as a political dynamic
Trotsky: hegemony as a social-political dynamic
The question of hegemony in the balance sheet of 1905
Soviets and hegemony
Later recaps: Lenin according to Trotsky
The Chinese revolution of 1925-27 and the theory of the permanent revolution
History of the Russian Revolution: critical rethinking of the problem of hegemony
Hegemony and the revolution in the West
Hegemony and duality of powers
Coutinho, Zavaleta Mercado and Bensaid: debates on dual power
Popular Front vs. Hegemony
Hegemony in Trotsky's Thought: The Problem of Hegemony in the Transition
NEP, smycka, hegemony
Lenin's last struggle
Fromthe truce of the XII Congress to the emergence of the Opposition
The Scissors Crisis
Bukharin, Zinoviev and Stalin: the re-emergence of old controversies
Criticism of harmonicism and bureaucratic methods
Stalin's USSR: predominance of the bureaucract, hegemony of the proletariat?
Conclusion: hegemony and permanent revolution
Trotsky in the Prison Notebooks
Trotsky's books published after his expulsion from the USSR
Revolutionary practice and "intellectualized" theory
Antonio Labriola and the tasks of the workers' state
Trotsky and industrialism: debate on transition
Between Cossacks and unionists
The "frontal attack" in times of siege
The Soviet Five-Year Plan: from fatalism to activism
The economic-corporate phase of the USSR: from "pretty minds" to "mechanic waste
Trotsky returns...and looks a little more like Lenin Bronstein, the German Bessarione and Davidovich
Reaffirmations
Black parliamentarism: "the liquidation of Leon Davidovich"
End to start
Once again on Trotsky and Gramsci
Perry Anderson: Whose Antinomies?
The problem of West Democracy and State
Hegemony and Culture
War of position and the problem of strategy
Emanuele Saccarelli: against the legacy of Stalinism in Political Theory
Gramsci for academics: distortions and depolitcization
The Devil is called Trotsky
Towards a rethinking of communism
Juan Dal Maso is an Independent Scholar from the City of Buenos Aires, Argentina. He is also a member of the editorial board of Ideas de Izquierda Semanario (Ideas of the Left Weekly) in Argentina, and the author of the following books; El marxismo de Gramsci (The marxism of Gramsci, 2016), translated to Italian and Portuguese, and Althusser y Sacristán (Louis Althusser and Manuel Sacristán, 2020) written with Ariel Petruccelli.
Leon Trotsky and Antonio Gramsci are two of the most important Marxist thinkers of the 20th century. This book explores the similarities and the differences between their philosophical and political theories. The first and second chapters deal with a still under-investigated aspect of Trotsky’s thought, i.e. his reflections on the issue of hegemony. The third chapter focuses on Gramsci’s critique of Trotsky in his Prison Notebooks, analysing Gramsci’s knowledge of Trotsky’s positions as well as the scope and limits of Gramsci’s critique. The fourth chapter consists of a critical rereading of Perry Anderson's essay Antinomies of Antonio Gramsci, originally published in 1976 and republished in 2017 and an analysis of the book Gramsci and Trotsky in the Shadow of Stalinism by Emanuele Saccarelli. The result is an investigation that offers new insight into both Trotsky’s and Gramsci’s thought, while proposing a new point of view from which to interpret revolutionary theory and strategy in the contemporary scenario. One of the main topics addressed throughout the book is the specific position of the problem of hegemony in a theory of permanent revolution, demonstrating that Trotsky had a particular understanding of the question of hegemony and that Gramsci, in turn, introduced a concept of hegemony that is closely associated with an idea of permanent revolution, such that the dynamics of the relationship between democratic struggles and socialist struggles presented in both theories are very similar.
Juan Dal Maso is an Independent Scholar from the City of Buenos Aires, Argentina.