Riforma e Rinascimento, Protestantism and Catholicism in Antonio Gramsci's writings on Italian history, 1926 - 35
Author:
David Gilks a
| Affiliation: | a Trinity College, Cambridge |
DOI:
10.1080/13545710701455635
Publication Frequency:
4 issues per year
Published in:
Journal of Modern Italian Studies,
Volume
12,
Issue
3
September
2007
, pages 286
- 306
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Abstract
This article readdresses Gramsci's use of Italian history, focusing on his judgement that the Italian Renaissance marked the start of a specifically Italian course of historical failure because it led directly to the Counter-Reformation, the Risorgimento and Fascism. It shows that Gramsci's political strategy after 1923 - on the need for a mass socialist movement - informed his historical opinions. His view of a regressive Renaissance contrasted the dominant historiographical consensus that saw it as the start of European modernity. Gramsci conceptualized modern European history according to a Reformation-Renaissance dichotomy that also determined his general sense of culture. By contrasting Catholic Italy (whose Renaissance had failed to lead to a Reformation) with the Protestant north (whose general Renaissance had formed a harmonious couplet with the Reformation), Gramsci reveals that his single greatest debt as a historian was to Weber rather than Marx or Croce.
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| Keywords: Gramsci; Renaissance; Reformation; Protestantism; Catholicism; Fascism |
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