Gramsci, An italian marxist intellectual politically active when fascism rose and later imprisoned by mussolini, Offers a sensitive and non-Stereotyped communist interpretation of fascism. He rejected the crude "fascism as last stage of capitalism thesis," the view that it was merely the "agent of the big bourgeoisie" and even the view that it reflected a particular set of class interests. He recognized that it was not merely reactionary, That it had complex internal divisions, That it exemplified the "relative autonomy of politics," and that it was best understood as a response to a "hegemonic crisis."
CITATION STYLE
Adamson, W. L. (1980). Gramsci’s Interpretation of Fascism. Journal of the History of Ideas, 41(4), 615. https://doi.org/10.2307/2709277
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