Thinker

Antonio Gramsci

He wrote his most important work in a fascist prison, explaining why workers defend the system that exploits them.

Political theorist, 1891–1937
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Antonio Gramsci was born in Ales, Sardinia, in 1891, the fourth of seven children. A childhood spinal condition left him physically frail for life. He won a scholarship to the University of Turin, where he studied linguistics and encountered the industrial working class of Italy’s northern factories.1

In 1919, he co-founded the newspaper L’Ordine Nuovo, which supported the factory council movement in Turin, where workers were attempting to exercise direct control over production. He became a founding member of the Communist Party of Italy in 1921 and its leader by 1924.2

In 1926, Mussolini’s fascist government arrested Gramsci. The prosecutor reportedly declared at his trial that they must stop this brain from functioning for twenty years.3 Over the next decade, in prison, Gramsci filled more than thirty notebooks with an analysis of how power operates through culture rather than force alone.

His central concept was hegemony: the process by which a ruling class maintains power not primarily through coercion but by making its own worldview appear natural, inevitable, and in everyone’s interest. Workers did not merely obey the system; they consented to it, because the system’s assumptions had become their own common sense.4

30
Notebooks Gramsci filled in prison between 1929 and 1935, developing his theory of cultural hegemony.

Gramsci’s health deteriorated steadily in prison. He was granted a conditional release in 1934 and transferred to a clinic, but the damage was irreversible. He died on April 27, 1937, at the age of forty-six, six days after his prison sentence officially ended.5

The Prison Notebooks were smuggled out of Italy and first published in the late 1940s and 1950s. They became foundational texts in cultural studies, political science, and the sociology of work.6 Gramsci’s insight, that the most effective form of control is the one people do not recognize as control, remains the sharpest tool for understanding why assumptions about careers, ambition, and success persist long after the conditions that created them have changed.

1919
Gramsci co-founded L’Ordine Nuovo in Turin, supporting factory councils and workers’ direct control.
1926
Mussolini’s government arrested Gramsci, beginning a decade of imprisonment.
1929–1935
Gramsci wrote more than thirty notebooks in prison, developing his theory of cultural hegemony.
1937
Gramsci died on April 27, six days after his sentence officially ended, at the age of forty-six.
1 Giuseppe Fiori, Antonio Gramsci: Life of a Revolutionary, translated by Tom Nairn (London: New Left Books, 1970), 40–60.
2 Fiori, Antonio Gramsci, 120–140.
3 Fiori, Antonio Gramsci, 230. The exact wording of the prosecutor’s remark is debated but widely cited in biographies.
4 Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks, edited and translated by Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith (New York: International Publishers, 1971).
5 Fiori, Antonio Gramsci, 290–295.
6 Hoare and Nowell Smith, introduction to Selections from the Prison Notebooks.
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