Antonio Gramsci's Bio
All the deets on your favorite critic's personal life.
Basic Information
Name | Antonio Gramsci |
Nickname | Toni G, Marxist Martyr, Freedom Fighter, Culture Warrior, The Hunchback of the Italian Left |
Sex | Male |
Home town | I was born on Sardinia (Sardegna in Italian), an island off the coast of Italy, and I kept it real throughout my career, representing my fellow sardi even after I'd made my way to Rome. I died in the clink in Rome, detained by Mussolini's goons. They couldn't keep me down, though, hard as they tried: I wrote my most important work, my Prison Notebooks, while locked up. |
Work & Education
Occupation | A jack of many trades—labor activist, journalist, outspoken Marxist theorist—I am most widely recognized as the author of a series of posthumously published writings called the Prison Notebooks. I penned these wide-ranging, freeform texts while in jail, addressing everything from language and politics to literature and history. These sprawling texts have since been compiled in many editions and countless translations, which means my ideas have traveled far and wide, influencing union leaders and office-holding politicians as well as academics and armchair philosophers. |
Education | I was trained as a linguist in Sardinia before making waves in Italy's rapidly industrializing urban centers. I made the most of my long and painful imprisonment by continuing my lifelong education there, reading up on Italian history and European philosophy. This makes me an example to incarcerated autodidacts everywhere. |
Beliefs
Political views | I make the American far left look positively conservative. That's because things were different when I was around: people still thought changing the world was possible, and not merely through Facebook and Twitter feeds. Capitalism hadn't yet triumphed, and my socialist comrades and I worked together to bring it down. Even during the dark years of management-friendly Fascism in Italy, it was possible to seek and find alternatives to capitalist rule—alternatives like the Soviet Union, which in my day, believe it or not, represented a beacon of hope for all of us leftists. But there I go again, waxing nostalgic… |
Religious views | Like all tried-and-true Marxists, I'm an atheist through and through. I mean, come on, people. Religion: the opium of the people. That said, I'm more sympathetic to folklore than many more traditional, hardline Marxists, who rail against superstition as a form of "false consciousness." Let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater, though—I think that folk practices, including religious practices, are important expressions of popular sentiment. Seriously, in our rush to rid ourselves of the oppressive strictures of organized religion, we shouldn't dismiss all the resources that may still be available in genuinely popular kinds of worship and communal life. There's a lot of wisdom there, and it comes from the people. |
Activities & Interests
Likes | The Proletariat Popular Culture (but not of the Miley Cyrus variety) Prison Education Staying in School Marx Machiavelli |
Dislikes | Dropping Out Being Reactionary Resisiting Change Benedetto Croce Optimism of the Intellect |
Interests | Writing Longhand Jailhouse Philosophy Fomenting Revolution Counter-Hegemonic Ideological Production |
Groups | Marxism Rad Radical Teachers Pedagogues of the Oppressed Renegade Philologists' Collective Proletarian Dictators and Other Inheritors of the Earth Prison Writers |