The Political Philosophies Of Antonio Gramsci And B. R. Ambedkar: Itineraries Of Dalits And Subalterns
deCosimo Zene
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1. Subalterns and Dalits in Gramsci and Ambedkar: A prologue to a 'posthumous' dialoguePart 1:The Emergence of Subaltern/Dalit Subjectivity and Historical Agency2. Subaltern Social Groups in Antonio Gramsci's Prison Notebooks 3. Revisiting Interwar Thought: Stigma, Labor, and the Immanence of Caste-Class 4. The Other Prince: Ambedkar, Constitutional Democracy, and the Agency of the LawPart 2:The Function of Intellectuals5. Notes on Q6§32: Gramsci and the Dalits 6. Limits of the Organic Intellectual: a Gramscian reading of AmbedkarPart 3:Subalternity and Common Sense7. Living Subalternity: Antonio Gramsci's Concept of Common Sense 8. Race, Class, & Religion: Gramsci's Conception of Subalternity 9. The Risorgimento and its Discontents. Gramsci's Reflections on Conflict and Control in the Aftermath of Italy's UnificationPart 4:Dalit Literature, Subalternity and Consciousness 10. Hegemony and Consciousness - building Processes in Dalit Literature 11. Consciousness, Agency and Humiliation: Reflections on Dalit Life Writing and SubalternityPart 5:The Religion of the Subalterns/Dalits 12. Why does religion matter to politics? Truth and ideology in a Gramscian approach 13. Intellectuals and Subalterns in the Context of Religion 14. The Place of 'Practical Spirituality' in the Lives of the Dalit Buddhists in Pune 15. Conclusion: Which Itineraries for Dalits, Subalterns and Intellectuals?