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3 ideas
20936 | Caesarism emerges when two forces in society are paralysed in conflict [Gramsci] |
Full Idea: Caesarism (as the emergence of a 'heroic' personality) expresses a situation in which the forces in conflict balance each other in a catastrophic manner ...which can only terminate in their reciprocal destruction. | |
From: Antonio Gramsci (Selections from Prison Notebooks [1971], 2 'Caesarism') | |
A reaction: He goes on to distinguish progressive and reactionary versions of Caesarism. Gramsci's interest is in the circumstances that throw up such people. Marx had identified 'Bonapartism'. |
20941 | Totalitarian parties cut their members off from other cultural organisations [Gramsci] |
Full Idea: A totalitarian party ensures that members find in that particular party all the satisfactions that they formerly found in a multiplicity of organisations. They break the threads that bind them to extraneous cultural organisms. | |
From: Antonio Gramsci (Selections from Prison Notebooks [1971], 2 'Organisation') | |
A reaction: British parties traditionally had a 'club house', where you could do most of your socialising. Presumably Nazis left the church, and various interest groups. |
20939 | What is the function of a parliament? Does it even constitute a part of the State structure? [Gramsci] |
Full Idea: The question has to be asked: do parliaments, even in fact constitute a part of the State structure? In other words, what is the real function? | |
From: Antonio Gramsci (Selections from Prison Notebooks [1971], 2 'Parliament') | |
A reaction: Nice question. In the UK it is only the cabinet which has active power. Backbench MPs are usually very frustrated, especially if their party has a comfortable majority, and their vote is not precious. They are privileged lobbyists. |