By Michael Ekers, Gillian Hart, Stefan Kipfer, Alex Loftus

This designated assortment is the 1st to deliver cognizance to Antonio Gramsci’s paintings inside geographical debates. proposing a considerably varied interpreting to Gramsci scholarship, the gathering forges a brand new process inside of human geography, environmental reports and improvement theory.

  • Offers the 1st sustained try and foreground Antonio Gramsci’s paintings inside of geographical debates
  • Demonstrates how Gramsci articulates a wealthy spatial sensibility while constructing a particular method of geographical questions
  • Presents a considerably diversified studying of Gramsci from dominant post-Marxist views, in addition to newer anarchist and post-anarchist evaluations
  • Builds at the emergence of Gramsci scholarship lately, taking this ahead via reports throughout a number of continents, and asking how his writings may interact with and animate political routine today
  • Forges a brand new method inside human geography, environmental reviews and improvement thought, construction on Gramsci’s leading edge philosophy of praxis

 

Content:
Chapter none “A Barbed reward of the Backwoods” (pages 1–5): Michael Ekers, Gillian Hart, Stefan Kipfer and Alex Loftus
Chapter none the way to dwell with Stones (pages 6–11): John Berger
Chapter 1 Gramsci (pages 13–43): Michael Ekers and Alex Loftus
Chapter 2 touring with Gramsci (pages 45–64): Adam David Morton
Chapter three “Gramsci in motion” (pages 65–82): David Featherstone
Chapter four urban, nation, Hegemony (pages 83–103): Stefan Kipfer
Chapter five nation of misunderstanding (pages 104–120): Geoff Mann
Chapter 6 the concept that of Nature in Gramsci (pages 121–141): Benedetto Fontana
Chapter 7 area, Ecology, and Politics within the Praxis of the Brazilian Landless circulation (pages 142–160): Abdurazack Karriem
Chapter eight at the Nature of Gramsci's “Conceptions of the area” (pages 161–177): Joel Wainwright
Chapter nine Gramsci, Nature, and the Philosophy of Praxis (pages 178–196): Alex Loftus
Chapter 10 distinction and Inequality in global Affairs (pages 197–216): Nicola Short
Chapter eleven Gramsci and the Erotics of work (pages 217–237): Michael Ekers
Chapter 12 Cracking Hegemony (pages 239–257): Jim Glassman
Chapter thirteen Gramsci on the Margins (pages 258–278): Vinay Gidwani and Dinesh Paudel
Chapter 14 Accumulation via Dispossession and Accumulation via development (pages 279–300): Judith Whitehead
Chapter 15 Gramsci, Geography, and the Languages of Populism (pages 301–320): Gillian Hart
Chapter sixteen Translating Gramsci within the present Conjuncture (pages 321–343): Stefan Kipfer and Gillian Hart

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Additional info for Gramsci: Space, Nature, Politics

Sample text

Within the disciplines of international political economy and international relations theory, a neo-Gramscian approach became a cornerstone of attempts to develop critical approaches (Cox 1981, 1987; Gill 1990; for an excellent summary of these debates see Morton 2007). Until recently, the spatiality of this work was relatively fixed, with scholars privileging the relationship between the state and the global (Cox 1981), or, in Gill’s (2003) somewhat deterritorialized approach, through an explicit focus on the global.

Overall, this collection seeks to build on previous studies of Gramsci and difference (Hall 1980; Moe 1990; Haug 2005; Bannerji 2006), while at the same time positioning Gramsci as a much more subtle thinker than either Laclau and Mouffe or Thomas acknowledge. Gramsci and Geography Since the emergence of radical approaches in the 1960s and 1970s, Gramsci has occasionally emerged as a secondary but rarely a primary force within disciplines such as geography, urban studies, and planning. Thus, Gramsci’s influence has not been as great as in allied disciplines.

University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis. Davidson, A. ” Thesis Eleven 95(1), 68–94. Day, R. J. F. (2005) Gramsci Is Dead. Pluto, London. de Mauro, T. ” In P. Ives & R. ), Gramsci, Language, and Translation. Lexington Books, Lanham, MD, pp. 51–62. , & Mann, G. ” Geoforum 40(3), 287–291. Femia, J. (1981) Gramsci’s Political Thought. Clarendon Press, Oxford. Finocchiaro, M. (1988) Gramsci and the History of Dialectical Thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Fontana, B. ” Philosophical Forum 27(3), 220–243.

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