Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Antonio Gramsci and Communication Studies

View through CrossRef
The strong affinity between the work of Antonio Gramsci and communication is based on several Gramscian communication-related themes and particular modes of his thought that significantly resonate with this field of studies. They include his drawing on the rhetorical tradition inspired by Vico, his assumptions of the constitutive role of language in creating an intersubjective reality that shapes common sense, and the fact that language provides the conditions of possibility for a hegemonic project. The strong tie between communication and Gramsci’s thought creates a vantage point for understanding both how Gramsci developed his political theories based on communication concerns and how those theories in turn advanced the field of communication. On the one hand, Gramsci by his intellectual formation, as well as via life experiences, became extremely receptive of theories that linked language, culture, and society. Those theories can help illuminate Gramsci’s key ideas, such as hegemony, common sense, national popular, the strategic concept of translation, and the relational nature of concepts. On the other hand, Gramsci’s own reflection on the nexus between language and history significantly contributes to a theorization of language as a cultural practice resisting hypostases, an important qualification of Saussurian structural linguistics, and finally can offer the basis for a materialist approach to communication. Thus, the common denominator of a Gramscian perspective on communication must be found in the consistent use of dialectical thinking, which mediates binarisms like diachronic–synchronic, stability–change, individual–collective, unity–diversity, and symbolic–material. This article discusses the above-mentioned connection between Gramsci and communication in more detail. First, it explicates the ways in which Gramsci’s work was influenced by communication concerns, and then it analyzes how Gramsci’s work influences the realm of human communication today.
Title: Antonio Gramsci and Communication Studies
Description:
The strong affinity between the work of Antonio Gramsci and communication is based on several Gramscian communication-related themes and particular modes of his thought that significantly resonate with this field of studies.
They include his drawing on the rhetorical tradition inspired by Vico, his assumptions of the constitutive role of language in creating an intersubjective reality that shapes common sense, and the fact that language provides the conditions of possibility for a hegemonic project.
The strong tie between communication and Gramsci’s thought creates a vantage point for understanding both how Gramsci developed his political theories based on communication concerns and how those theories in turn advanced the field of communication.
On the one hand, Gramsci by his intellectual formation, as well as via life experiences, became extremely receptive of theories that linked language, culture, and society.
Those theories can help illuminate Gramsci’s key ideas, such as hegemony, common sense, national popular, the strategic concept of translation, and the relational nature of concepts.
On the other hand, Gramsci’s own reflection on the nexus between language and history significantly contributes to a theorization of language as a cultural practice resisting hypostases, an important qualification of Saussurian structural linguistics, and finally can offer the basis for a materialist approach to communication.
Thus, the common denominator of a Gramscian perspective on communication must be found in the consistent use of dialectical thinking, which mediates binarisms like diachronic–synchronic, stability–change, individual–collective, unity–diversity, and symbolic–material.
This article discusses the above-mentioned connection between Gramsci and communication in more detail.
First, it explicates the ways in which Gramsci’s work was influenced by communication concerns, and then it analyzes how Gramsci’s work influences the realm of human communication today.

Related Results

Gramsci and Geography
Gramsci and Geography
On 16 May 1925, Antonio Gramsci delivered his first and only speech in the Italian Parliament. An elected deputy of the Italian Communist Party, he spoke out against Fascist effort...
Düzeltme: Çağdaş Sosyal Teoride Antonio Gramsci
Düzeltme: Çağdaş Sosyal Teoride Antonio Gramsci
Bu çalışmanın temel amacı, çağdaş sosyal teoride Gramsci’nin görüşlerine odaklanmaktır. Güney İtalya’da 1891 yılında doğan Gramsci, hegemonya kuramıyla çağdaş sosyal teoriye ve mod...
Çağdaş Sosyal Teoride Antonio Gramsci
Çağdaş Sosyal Teoride Antonio Gramsci
Bu çalışmanın temel amacı, çağdaş sosyal teoride Gramsci’nin görüşlerine odaklanmaktır. Güney İtalya’da 1891 yılında doğan Gramsci, hegemonya kuramıyla çağdaş sosyal teoriye ve mod...
Gramsci on Theatre
Gramsci on Theatre
Our occasional series on early Marxist theatre criticism – which has already included Trotsky on Wedekind in NTQ28, Lunacharsky on Ibsen in NTQ39, and Mehring on Hauptmann in NTQ 4...
Gramsci e o fascismo: uma análise conceitual a partir dos Cadernos do Cárcere, de Antonio Gramsci
Gramsci e o fascismo: uma análise conceitual a partir dos Cadernos do Cárcere, de Antonio Gramsci
Resumo: Para Gramsci, o fascismo foi a resposta ao processo revolucionário iniciado com a Revolução Bolchevique (1917), como, também, pela “crise orgânica” aberta pela I Guerra Mun...
Filosofia da práxis na constituição da hegemonia da classe trabalhadora segundo Gramsci
Filosofia da práxis na constituição da hegemonia da classe trabalhadora segundo Gramsci
Gramsci avança em relação à interpretação de Marx, que fundamenta suas reflexões sobre a exploração da classe dominada pela classe dominante. Em contribuição às análises de Marx, G...

Back to Top