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== Transformism ==


'''WIP'''
Redirection Trasformismo => Transformism
'''Transformism''' (from the Italian word '''Trasformismo''') is a historical term used to describe the formation of a hegemonic liberal government with the participation of converted members of both left-wing and right-wing parties in the years ater the Italian unification (1880s).<ref name="gramsci">{{Citation|title=Selections from Prison Notebooks|author=Antonio Gramsci|publisher=The Electric Book Company|year=2001|chapter=On Italian History|page=213-214|isbn=1843271192}}</ref>.
Gramsci discerns two phases of Italian transformism:
* '''Molecular transformism''' (1860-1900), whereby political figures from the democratic opposition parties converted individually to the conservative-moderate political framework, accepting its hegemony and aversion to the participation of the masses in state life.<ref name="gramsci"></ref>
* '''Group transformism''' (1900 - circa 1922), whereby entire groups of leftists convert to the moderate camp.<ref name="gramsci"></ref>
=== History ===
=== Transformism in modern days ===
=== References ===
<references/>
---
Title: Is trasformismo a useful category for analysing modern Italian politics?
Series: Journal of Modern Italian Studies 2014-feb 05 vol. 19 iss. 2
Author(s): Valbruzzi, Marco
Year: 2014
Title: Selection from the Prison Notebooks
Author(s): Gramsci, Antonio

Latest revision as of 16:09, 13 March 2024

Transformism[edit | edit source]

WIP


Redirection Trasformismo => Transformism


Transformism (from the Italian word Trasformismo) is a historical term used to describe the formation of a hegemonic liberal government with the participation of converted members of both left-wing and right-wing parties in the years ater the Italian unification (1880s).[1].

Gramsci discerns two phases of Italian transformism:

  • Molecular transformism (1860-1900), whereby political figures from the democratic opposition parties converted individually to the conservative-moderate political framework, accepting its hegemony and aversion to the participation of the masses in state life.[1]
  • Group transformism (1900 - circa 1922), whereby entire groups of leftists convert to the moderate camp.[1]

History[edit | edit source]

Transformism in modern days[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Antonio Gramsci (2001). Selections from Prison Notebooks: 'On Italian History' (pp. 213-214). The Electric Book Company. ISBN 1843271192

---

Title: Is trasformismo a useful category for analysing modern Italian politics?
Series: Journal of Modern Italian Studies 2014-feb 05 vol. 19 iss. 2
Author(s): Valbruzzi, Marco
Year: 2014
Title: Selection from the Prison Notebooks
Author(s): Gramsci, Antonio