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Author | Aleksandr Guber, Shagdaryn Bira, Sanje Dylykov, Hudogiin Perlee, Georgiy Kim, Shagdarjavyn Natsagdorj, Bazaryn Shirendev, Yevgeniy Zhukov |
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First published | 1973 Moscow |
Type | Book |
Articles needing cleaning up, Incomplete library works, Library documents from Mongolia, Library works about Mongolia, Library works about history
22 November
- We don't have anything yet on this day, maybe soon! Why not read a random page?
Antonio Gramsci | |
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Born | 22 January 1891 Ales, Sardinia, Italy |
Died | 27 April 1937 Rome, Italy |
Nationality | Italian |
Known for | Theory of cultural hegemony Writing the Prison Notebooks |
Antonio Gramsci was an Italian Marxist, one of the founders and leaders of the Italian Communist Party. In 1926, he was imprisoned by Benito Mussolini's fascist regime; he spent the remaining years of his life in prison, eventually dying in 1937 of a mix of several health complications.[1] In prison, he wrote a famous series of assorted notes and Marxist analyses known as the Prison Notebooks.
← Back to all essays | Author's essays Stalin wears Green and a Red Star
by Certified Red G*mer
Published: 2020-12-18 (last update: 2024-11-22)
35-55 minutes
Recently, a disturbing trend has come to my attention, the unrelenting defamation of comrade Stalin by certain Gonzaloist circles. These Gonzaloists , desperately trying to deepen the theoretical rift between Stalin and Mao even where there is no split to be found. They try to artificially expand a miniscule crack into an all-encompassing rupture. They unsuccessfully attempt to make Stalin look like a stupid idiotic reactionary who was [theoretically] completely destroyed by the absolute genius and humanity’s saviour, Mao: any credit to another of the 5 heads is an attack on Mao himself. They are obsessed. They are a cult.
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Lemmy etc
- ↑ Antonio Gramsci (1971). Selections from the Prison Notebooks: 'Introduction' (pp. xvii–xcvi). New York City: International Publishers. ISBN 071780397X