Gramsci and the Struggle for Democratic Communism

Author:   Michael Wayne (Brunel University, UK)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781350447097


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   16 April 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Gramsci and the Struggle for Democratic Communism


Overview

With its authoritarian distortions, the Marxism of the 20th century sundered the connections between the practice of Communism, and its essentially democratic ethos. This book reconstructs those vital threads by turning to the work of Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci. In the wake of the rise of neoliberalism and the new global order that it ushered in, Gramsci and the Struggle for Democratic Communism asks: what form of political rule can facilitate the transition away from capitalism’s increasingly apocalyptic end game? To answer this question, Wayne puts Gramsci into dialogue with key thinkers from his own historical period, from Marx, Lenin and Trotsky through to John Dewey and Walter Lippmann. Wayne argues that Gramsci’s contribution to Marxism helps clarify the political inheritance that class democracies bequeath a revolutionary transition. Wayne then puts Gramsci into a critical dialogue with contemporary thinkers such as Stuart Hall, Ernesto Laclau and Antonio Negri, analysing such crisis situations as Britain and Venezuela under neoliberalism. In the final chapter he develops the concept of ‘elongated dual power’ to explore how revolutionary change can be reconciled with democratic principles as the old choice between barbarism or revolutionary change looms once more on the horizon.

Full Product Details

Author:   Michael Wayne (Brunel University, UK)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.640kg
ISBN:  

9781350447097


ISBN 10:   1350447099
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   16 April 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Part One: Gramsci in his Own Time 1. Introduction 2. Marx and Gramsci on Nineteenth Century European Capitalist State Formations. 3. Lenin and Gramsci on Economism, Vanguardism and Revolutionary Hegemony. 4. Trotsky and Gramsci on Politics and the Culture of Everyday Life. 5. Gramsci and the Philosophers of the Western Public Sphere. Part Two: Gramsci in Our Time 6. Theorising the Contemporary Historical Bloc: Dialogues with Stuart Hall and Nancy Fraser. 7. The Hegemony of Radical Liberalism Over the Left. 8. Gramsci in the Venezuelan Revolution. 9. Gramsci and the Contradictions of Revolution.

Reviews

Gramsci is famous as the thinker who urged Marxism to come to grips with the question of the political, of institutionality and organisation, of consensus and hegemony. But as this book persuasively demonstrates, the thought of Gramsci also offers a way to rescue and re-imagine democracy in times of acute democratic crisis. Vis-a-vis a declining capitalist democracy which is becoming increasingly illiberal and the embarrassment of a Soviet-style communism which ultimately frustrated working people’s aspirations, Gramsci’s thought invites us to move beyond our present ideological stalemate, and actively work to reconcile social justice and freedom, communism and democracy. This is an essential reading for all those who want to learn more about the relevance of Gramsci for contemporary society and its manifold political dilemmas. * Paulo Gerbaudo *


Gramsci is famous as the thinker who urged Marxism to come to grips with the question of the political, of institutionality and organisation, of consensus and hegemony. But as this book persuasively demonstrates, the thought of Gramsci also offers a way to rescue and re-imagine democracy in times of acute democratic crisis. Vis-a-vis a declining capitalist democracy which is becoming increasingly illiberal and the embarrassment of a Soviet-style communism which ultimately frustrated working people’s aspirations, Gramsci’s thought invites us to move beyond our present ideological stalemate, and actively work to reconcile social justice and freedom, communism and democracy. This is an essential reading for all those who want to learn more about the relevance of Gramsci for contemporary society and its manifold political dilemmas. * Paulo Gerbaudo, author of Tweets and the Streets (2012), The Mask and the Flag (2017) and The Digital Party (2019). * In Gramsci and the Struggle for a Democratic Communism, Michael Wayne painstakingly works the intellectual historiography of Marxism and left-revolutionary politics, separating wheat from chaff along the way, in order to recover the democratic impulse at communism’s core. Wayne’s extensive interpretation of Gramsci’s intellectual and organizational contributions to building a means-based democratic communism is situated in its historical context; when the viability of communism’s revolutionary project was increasingly eclipsed by fascism and the class alliances that helped to build and sustain it. For Wayne, the value of Gramsci’s work comes from the practicality of class struggle; the lessons and resources critically assimilated into a politics that, in spite of it all, worked to realize the ends of the democratic ethos of communism. As Wayne points out we, too, are in a time where democracy and reason are also being eclipsed. As the scope of our contemporary social contradictions deepens and expands—facilitated by an increasingly international authoritarian political project—Wayne consummately revivifies Gramsci’s work to re-articulate the slim potential for a political project that halts our course towards misery, barbarism, and extinction. * Robert F. Carley, Associate Professor of International Affairs, Texas A&M University, College Station * Gramsci and the Struggle for Democratic Communism is erudite and engaged. Erudition is apparent in Part 1, which reads Gramsci as overcoming the impasse between Kautsky and Lenin; engagement in Part 2, Gramscian readings of Thatcherism and Bolivarianism. The conclusion: 'the odds are not great, but they are not zero * Dr Andrew Milner Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature, Monash University, Australia *


Author Information

Michael Wayne is Professor of Screen Media at Brunel University, UK. He is author of Marx's Das Kapital For Beginners (2012) and Marxism and Media Studies: Key Concepts and Contemporary Trends (2003).

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