Italian intellectual and political activist, founder of the Communist Party (Ales, Sardinia, 1891 - Rome, 1937). Thanks to the support of his brother and his intellectual capacity he overcame the difficulties produced by his physical deformity (he was hunchbacked) and by the poverty of his family (since his father was imprisoned, accused of embezzlement). He studied at the University of Turin, where he was influenced intellectually by Benedetto Croce and the socialists.
In 1913 he joined the Italian Socialist Party, immediately becoming a leader of its left wing. After working on various party periodicals, he founded, together with Palmiro Togliatti and Umberto Elia Terracini, the magazine Ordine nuovo (1919). Faced with the dilemma posed to socialists around the world by the course taken by the Russian Revolution, Antonio Gramsci chose to adhere to the communist line and, at the Livorno Congress (1921), split with the group that founded the Italian Communist Party.
Gramsci belonged from the beginning to the Central Committee of the new party, which he also represented in Moscow within the Third International (1922); he endowed the formation with an official press organ (L'Unità, 1924) and represented it as a deputy (1924). He was a member of the Executive of the Communist International, whose Bolshevik orthodoxy he defended in Italy by expelling from the party the ultra-left group of Amadeo Bordiga, which he accused of following Trotsky's line (1926).
He soon had to go underground, since since 1922 Italy was under the power of Mussolini, who would exercise from 1925 an iron fascist dictatorship. Gramsci was arrested in 1926 and spent the rest of his life in prison, subjected to humiliation and ill-treatment, which added to his tuberculosis to make prison life extremely difficult, until he died of cerebral congestion.
In these conditions, however, Gramsci was able to produce a great written work (the voluminous Prison Notebooks), containing an original revision of Marx's thought, in a historicist sense and tending to modernize the legacy of Marxism to adapt it to the conditions of Italy and twentieth-century Europe. Already at the Lyon Congress (1926) he had advocated the broadening of the social bases of communism by opening it to all classes of workers, including intellectuals. His theoretical contributions would powerfully influence the adaptation of Western communism that took place in the sixties and seventies, the so-called Eurocommunism. 🤮
Gramsci’s concept of hegemony. Gramsci saw the ruling class maintaining its power over society in two ways –
Coercion – it uses the army, police, prison and courts to force other classes to accept its rule
Consent (hegemony) – it uses ideas and values to persuade the subordinate classes that its rule is legitimate
Hegemony and Revolution
In advanced Capitalist societies, the ruling class rely heavily on consent to maintain their rule. Gramsci agrees with Marx that they are able to maintain consent because they control institutions such as religion, the media and the education system. However, according to Gramsci, the hegemony of the ruling class is never complete, for two reasons:
The ruling class are a minority – and as such they need to make ideological compromises with the middle classes in order to maintain power The proletariat have dual consciousness. Their ideas are influenced not only by bourgeois ideology but also by the material conditions of their life – in short, they are aware of their exploitation and are capable or seeing through the dominant ideology.
Antonio Gramsci Marxists.org :gramsci-heh:
Antonio Gramsci and the Italian Revolution :anti-italian-action:
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can you quote it? archive.ph not getting me past the paywall
haven't realized it's paywalled pt. 1
About the nicest thing anyone on Chapo Trap House had to say about Kamala Harris in the aftermath of Donald Trump’s electoral victory was when cohost Amber A’Lee Frost lamented, “We could have had President Xanax MILF. That would have been way more fun.” The democratic socialist podcasters weren’t blind to the “truly evil” things coming in Trump’s second term, but they weren’t surprised that he won, as cohost Will Menaker put it. Harris’s refusal to engage seriously with protests against Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, her alliance with the family of Dick Cheney, and her inability to articulate a vision for the country were all part of why none of the Chapo hosts I recently spoke with—Frost, Menaker, and Felix Biederman—voted for a presidential candidate in 2024. “Whoever wins,” Menaker said on a pre-election episode, “we lose.”They weren’t always so fatalistic. Menaker started the show in early 2016 with Biederman and fellow “Weird Twitter” poster Matt Christman. After that year’s election, they added Frost and Justin Cass, who goes by Virgil Texas, as cohosts. By then, subscribers were sending more than $20,000 a month on Patreon, according to data collected by Graphtreon. Their live shows started selling out, and in 2018 they published a best-selling book. Their irreverent humor, edging into hyperbolic surrealism, and hyperliterate delivery brought listeners in, but their message kept them coming back. They were sardonic, not cynical. They spoke to a socialist impulse that had been largely repressed in mainstream media since the Cold War.
Chapo rode the wave of a resurgent electoral left in the wake of Bernie Sanders’s first campaign, becoming the flagship media project of his movement. By March 2020, the podcast was the highest-grossing podcast on Patreon and was bringing in $174,000 a month on the site. And their mission sharpened as Sanders prepared to run again. They urged listeners to travel to early primary states to canvas for Sanders. Many in the more than 700-strong audience at their Iowa show on the night of the caucuses had crossed state lines. “What’s scary is that we’re not just tossing out catharsis and jokes into the void,” Biederman told them. “This is part of something real.”
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Finn Wolfhard Takes a Lie Detector Test
Even then, they knew Sanders was up against a powerful Democratic Party machine. “Government and big business are coming after our movement, and they’re coming strong, but they won’t win, because we are the biggest and most honest podcast in America!” Menaker shouted to the crowd in Iowa City, mixing facetiousness with a measure of truth and genuine optimism. “Other than Joe Rogan,” corrected Frost. “Looks like Jon Lovett’s just another screenwriter now,” said Biederman, calling out one of the cohosts of Pod Save America, the rival show started by former Barack Obama aides that speaks to the Democratic establishment.
Super Tuesday 2020, when Joe Biden locked up the Democratic nomination, marked a turn for Chapo. “I felt like that was the chance for the left in this country to assert themselves politically through the electoral system, and it didn’t work,” Menaker, who is 41, tells me. “It revealed the actual purpose of the Democratic Party, which is to prevent something like that from happening.” After that March, their Patreon earnings flatlined, not dropping precipitously, but never again rising with the same speed. The locus of the show’s mission had spun out. “During the Bernie years, it was easy to evangelize to the audience,” Frost tells me. “Without that, the second I realize someone is listening, it’s a little more difficult.”
In the Biden years, Chapo’s hosts would confront scandal and tragedy. They’d search for new opportunities in the gloaming of political hope. But the “dirtbag left” community they’d brought together would never entirely dissipate. Though they didn’t have a candidate or a movement to call their own, the show continued to serve a political purpose. “It offers a vocabulary for young dudes that would feel alienated and would maybe fall into the alt-right. It allows them an analysis of the world that doesn’t come down to shitting on women or people of color or people poorer than they are,” says Jason Grote, a screenwriter who has collaborated with the hosts. “It’s about solidarity.”
That wasn’t enough for some liberals after Trump coasted to reelection victory on a series of endorsements from podcasts appealing to young men, most prominent among them Joe Rogan’s. “People all over are being like, ‘Where’s the liberal or the progressive-left thing that speaks to these, kind of, rude young men?’” steamed Chapo’s producer Chris Wade on their first episode after the 2024 election. “I’ve spent 20,000 hours editing it.” Pundits began pining for a Rogan type who could, presumably, sway a young, male electorate into voting Democratic. Menaker tells me that the Democrats’ problem was their message, not its medium. “Joe Rogan was the Joe Rogan of the left back when he endorsed Bernie Sanders,” he points out.
“I’m not giving any campaign advice here,” Menaker adds, “other than to believe different things,” Menaker says.
David Weigel, a Semafor political reporter and frequent guest on the show, doesn’t see Chapo breaking through to Rogan’s audience. “The appeal from right-wing podcasts has been, ‘You need to improve yourself, you need to become an alpha, you need to stop eating seed oils.’ There are a lot of young people who think that—unlike Bernie, who said, ‘I want to fight for somebody I don’t know’—they just want to fight for themselves,” he says. “The Chapo offer is, ‘You can want a better world, you can want socialism, and that will lead to a better life.’ They’re offering something that very successful right-wing media is offering a quicker alternative to, and the quicker alternative is attractive, in part, because Donald Trump wins elections and Bernie Sanders hasn’t.”
Chapo was never going to blindly fall in line behind whoever the Democratic Party anointed in 2024. Their politics aren’t premised on party loyalty like those of, say, Pod Save America, which unsurprisingly was the first stop for the Harris brain trust in discussing their loss. “To the extent that [leftist streamer Hasan Piker] or Joe Rogan have an audience, or a platform, or a large audience that trusts them, it’s because they don’t have the politics of Pod Save America,” Menaker said on that postelection Chapo episode. Biederman, who once appeared on a show hosted by Lovett, articulated the core of Chapo’s critique of the centrist-left podcast in 2018. “All these people have ever done is subscribe to the news and work at a comms department for 30 years and then tell you how to argue with your racist uncle,” he said. “These Obama freaks, they don’t give a shit. They will hang out anyone to dry. They don’t believe in anything.”
The Chapo hosts identified the same problem in their postmortems of Harris’s campaign. “They come up with all these excuses about messaging, the story we tell, the political atmosphere, the political biosphere, and all this hokum to cover the fact that they don’t believe in anything,” said Menaker in one. “Left unsaid in all this about why she didn’t do the shows that appeal to young people, or young men in particular, that Trump did and did so well on, is that if she was going to any nontraditional media forum in which the subject of politics is discussed, and they have an audience that’s politically engaged, she would have had to face questions that she simply cannot answer.”
In May 2020, weeks after Sanders dropped out of the Democratic primary and New York issued a shelter in place order, Chapo too found itself short of answers. “Look, I have to get out of town or I’m going to lose my mind,” Frost texted their group chat. “You’re welcome to come if you want.” So Christman, Menaker, Biederman, and Frost piled into a van and left New York for an Airbnb in the Catskills. “We had invested a lot of our creative energy, our personal time and effort, into making Bernie the Democratic nominee. It didn’t work out. We hit the limits of what our podcast and its effect on the world could possibly be,” Menaker says. “We needed to commune with nature.”
That weekend in the woods was the first time they’d been together since the defeat. “Not to say that we had it any worse than anyone with a real job, but losing like that and then, like, ‘Go sit inside for fucking months’—that really sucked,” Biederman tells me. “But we didn’t talk about any of that when we were there. It just relieved a lot of pressure.” They did acid and watched Scott Adkins’s nonsensical thriller Avengement. “It was a moment to escape thinking about the future,” says Frost, but also, “it was kind of important. Even Felix, the total homebody, he came out. It’s important to maintain your relationships.”
Only one cohost didn’t join them. Cass had been invited, but wasn’t interested. He withdrew after Sanders’s loss, no longer regularly appearing on the show. “It was very obvious that was a breaking point for him,” says David Eisenberg, a longtime friend. “He was a pain in the ass to work with,” says Frost. “I saw our connection to him starting to fray, but Bernie and the mission kept that from completely falling apart. After it was gone, it did. We were staying together for the kids.”
pt.2 (with virgil and netflix start)
Only one cohost didn’t join them. Cass had been invited, but wasn’t interested. He withdrew after Sanders’s loss, no longer regularly appearing on the show. “It was very obvious that was a breaking point for him,” says David Eisenberg, a longtime friend. “He was a pain in the ass to work with,” says Frost. “I saw our connection to him starting to fray, but Bernie and the mission kept that from completely falling apart. After it was gone, it did. We were staying together for the kids.”Before the podcast, Cass had been a career extra, appearing in shows like Gossip Girl and Girls, but Chapo’s success seemed to reorient his ambitions toward the political. “He wanted very different things out of his life and career than we did,” says Biederman. “He wanted to be an actual pundit.” The first episode of Bad Faith, a podcast Cass hosted with former Sanders press secretary Briahna Joy Gray, aired in September 2020. “He started another podcast without really telling us,” says Frost. Months later, in May 2021, Chapo sent subscribers a statement announcing that Cass was no longer a cohost. “This separation is mutual and amicable,” it read. “We all wish him the absolute best.”
On June 9, 2021, a Twitter user posted a thread claiming they had had a “traumatizing” online relationship with Cass when they were a teenager. “I believed that we were in a long distance, adult relationship as he requested things of that nature from me,” they wrote. “I don’t want to give explicit details of what happened over [FaceTime], but I think you get the idea and it was traumatizing.” They added, “It made me feel so disgusting that someone who is lauded as a champion of my political beliefs did this to me.”
Frost didn’t immediately credit the accusations. “This was an anonymous person on the internet, which is the exact demographic of people who make shit up about us,” she tells me. Nevertheless, she asked Cass about it. “I was like, ‘Hey, are you a piece of shit?’ He was just like, ‘Well, yes, but nothing criminal,’” she recalls. “That’s vague.” Eisenberg says that when he asked, Cass denied the accusations.
At the end of that June, Gray put out a statement. “Although we have discussed his obligation to address this accusation, he has not provided me with any additional insight into the facts of the underlying claim. Not knowing more, I want to avoid weighing in irresponsibly,” she wrote. “My understanding is that Virgil plans to make a statement shortly.” Cass never made a statement, never appeared on either podcast again, and did not respond to multiple requests for comment, including a detailed list of questions sent to an email he has used in recent months. He still appears on Bad Faith’s cover art, but attempts to reach him through Gray and other former associates went unanswered.
None of the Chapos who would talk about their former cohost could say what he’d been up to since the split, but they indicated that he’s still receiving subscriber money. “We all want to have a Chapo pension for anyone who, no matter what conditions we part under, helped build the show,” says Frost. Wade confirms that Cass receives money, albeit a smaller share than that of the current hosts; he describes the arrangement as “somewhere between pension and contractual obligation.”
Eisenberg, one of Cass’s best friends, eventually cut him off. In late 2021, he was considering Cass to be one of the groomsmen at his wedding. “I had to tell him, ‘I can’t rely on you. I have to let you go from the group.’ He didn’t put up much resistance, if any.”
“He was kind of like a tumbleweed,” says Eisenberg. “He ran away from his problems.”
As one cohost fell away, another struck out in a new direction. In June 2020, Frost took a Xanax and boarded a socially distanced flight to Los Angeles. She started a Hollywood production company called ColdFeet. “I run head first into things,” she explains. “For better or worse, sometimes for worse, I never get cold feet.” Unlike Chapo, where everything is evenly distributed, Frost is sole CEO, though she brought on the rest as owners and lured them West. “I was the pioneer,” she says. “Then I sent back word that it’s bright and sunny here in California.”
In 2016, Menaker talked about expanding Chapo into a site with videos and blogs, but ColdFeet was more than a pivot to video. “Imagine if they actually produced a feature-length film,” says Catherine Liu, a professor of film and media studies at UC Irvine who has known Frost since 2014. “Hollywood is very milquetoast, anodyne, liberal. Democratic Party politics could be produced by bots. Is there space for some kind of spontaneous media experience of left spectacle and entertainment and laughs? Yes. It’s all we have now. We have so little political power.”
It wasn’t long before Christman had an Amber in each ear preaching the virtues of California. He got to know Amber Rollo while swimming in the Rockaways that first pandemic summer. She was a comedian, native to the Golden State, living in a Bushwick loft with no AC, no heater, and no stove. Rollo, who wasn’t a podcast listener, recalls Christman wanting to take “a step back from bigger politics and trying to focus more on his small community.” As winter approached, she and Christman loaded up her 1990 Chevy conversion van with a broken odometer and took off for California.
When the couple later decided to get married, Menaker, an online minister of the Universal Life Church, came out to officiate the wedding at Little Secret, a Hollywood DIY venue where Rollo hosted shows featuring former presidential candidate Marianne Williamson and Amazon union organizer Chris Smalls. At karaoke afterward, the bride and groom sang the B-52’s “Love Shack.” Chapo producer Chris Wade and his wife, Molly Mary O’Brien, who sang Tenacious D’s “Fuck Her Gently,” looked around and decided to move. David Weigel attended, but didn’t sing. Biederman didn’t sing either—“I like [karaoke] in the Yakuza series of games,” he says, “not in real life”—but he too succumbed to the Hollywood drift. Menaker, the son of New Yorker and New York Times editors, was the only one to stay loyal to the city. “Go Yankees,” he says.
With mentors like The Big Short director Adam McKay, Uncut Gems codirector Benny Safdie, and Oscar-winning screenwriter Josh Olson, Chapo was quickly entrenched in projects. Jason Grote, who had been a writer on Mad Men, helped Christman and Menaker adapt their podcast series about George H.W. Bush for TV. “I’m a drama writer, so the pitch was coming off as a little bit more prestige TV and a little bit less Chapo,” he recalls. “Safdie advised us to just write it as a pilot.” They wrote an episode where a young H.W. is tricked into dosing John F. Kennedy with acid. “If you play it as drama, people are more resistant to it,” Grote says. “Whereas if you crank up the absurdity…”
lol @ chapo still paying him, he's probably living his best life doing drugs all day and gaming