Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebook 5: Contents

Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks: Notebook 5

(Miscellaneous)

1930-1932


Note # Note title or words from first line
§1 Catholic integralists, Jesuits, Modernists
§2 Rotary Club
§3 Owen, Saint-Simon, and Ferrante Aporti’s infant schools
§4 Saint-Simonism, Freemasonry, Rotary Club
§5 Catholic social action
§6 Past and present
§7 On Catholic “social thought”...
§8 America and the Mediterranean
§9 Lucien Romier and Catholic Action in France
§10 Catholic Action in Belgium
§11 Catholic integralists, Jesuits, Modernists
§12 The Risorgimento. Solaro della Margarita
§13 Catholic Action
§14 Catholic integralists, Jesuits, Modernists
§15 Lucien Romier and Catholic Action in France
§16 Catholic integralists. Jesuits, Modernists
§17 The Pan-Christian movement
§18 Catholic social thought
§19 Catholic Action in Italy
§20 Machiavelli and Emanuele Filiberto
§21 For the history of the Italian workers' movement
§22 Catholic Action in Germany
§23 Brief notes on Chinese culture
§24 Past and present. Respect for the national artistic heritage
§25 Machiavelli and Manzoni
§26 Father Bresciani’s progeny. Alfredo Panzini
§27 Father Bresciani’s progeny
§28 Ideology, psychologism, positivism
§29 East-West
§30 The international function of Italian intellectuals
§31 On the Italian national tradition
§32 Ugo Foscolo and Italian literary rhetoric
§33 M. Iskowicz, La Littérature à la lumière du matérialisme historique
§34 Past and present
§35 Risorgimento
§36 Past and present
§37 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals
§38 The non-national-popular character of Italian literature
§39 Scepticism
§40 Pirandello
§41 Vocational guidance
§42 The tradition of Rome
§43 The episode of the arrest of the La Gala brothers in 1863
§44 T. Tittoni, “Ricordi personali di politica interna”
§45 Enrico Catellani, “La libertà del mare”
§46 Claudio Faina, “Il carburante nazionale”
§47 Catholic Action
§48 Domenico Spadoni, “Le Società segrete nella Rivoluzione milanese dell'aprile 1814”
§49 Bernardo Sanvisenti, “La questione delle Antille”
§50 Brief notes on Japanese culture
§51 Brief notes on Chinese culture
§52 Domenico Meneghini, “Industrie chimiche italiane”
§53 Reformation and Renaissance. Nicholas of Cusa
§54 Father Bresciani’s progeny
§55 Romagna and its role in Italian history
§56 Catholic Action
§57 Catholic Action in the United States
§58 Catholic Action
§59 Catholic Action in Germany
§60 “La schiavitù del lavoro indigeno” (by A. Brucculeri)
§61 Rotary Club
§62 The editorial staff of La Civiltà Cattolica
§63 Father Bresciani’s progeny
§64 Church and State in Italy before the Conciliation
§65 Risorgimento. The historical conjuncture of 1848-1849
§66 Father Bresciani’s progeny. Ugo Ojetti and the Jesuits
§67 Catholic Action
§68 Monsignor Francesco Lanzoni, Le Diocesi d'Italia...
§69 Encyclopedic notions
§70 The State is the Church
§71 The nature of the Concordats
§72 Past and present
§73 Politico-military direction of the war
§74 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals
§75 Maggiorino Ferraris and life in Italy from 1882 to 1926
§76 The crisis of 1898
§77 Garibaldi’s crossing from Sicily to Calabria in 1860
§78 Monasticism and feudalism
§79 A. G. Bianchi, “I clubs rossi durante l’assedio di Parigi”
§80 Sorel and the Jacobins
§81 Past and present. Territorial distribution of the Italian population
§82 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals
§83 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals
§84 Popular literature
§85 Development of the bourgeois spirit in Italy
§86 England
§87 Political-military leadership in the war of 1914-1918
§88 On the Italian Risorgimento. Michele Amari and Sicilianism
§89 Gabriele Gabbrielli, “India ribelle”
§90 Brief notes on Islamic culture
§91 Renaissance and Reformation
§92 Italian diplomacy
§93 Eighteenth-century Italian morals
§94 The negative popular-national character of Italian literature
§95 Fifteenth-century and sixteenth-century man
§96 The negative national-popular character of Italian literature
§97 The intellectuals
§98 Post-war history
§99 German armament at the time of the armistice
§100 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals
§101 Father Bresciani’s progeny. Filippo Crispolti
§102 Italian literature. The contribution by bureaucrats
§103 Popular literature. Theater
§104 The sixteenth century
§105 Americanism
§106 Luigi Villari, “Il governo laburista inglese”
§107 Italy and Palestine
§108 Sicily. The Sicilian Pantheon of San Domenico
§109 Sicily
§110 France and Italy
§111 The Italian Academy
§112 Carlo Schanzer, “Sovranità e giustizia nei rapporti fra gli stati”
§113 On Henrik Ibsen
§114 Encyclopedia of concepts-political, philosophical, etc. Postulate
§115 Niccolò Machiavelli
§116 G. B. “La Banca dei regolamenti internazionali”
§117 Argus, “Il disarmo navale, i sottomarini e gli aeroplani”
§118 Stresemann
§119 Encyclopedia of concepts-political, philosophical, etc. Middle class
§120 Catholic cultural nationalism
§121 France
§122 National-popular
§123 Renaissance
§124 Past and present. Certain intellectuals
§125 Types of periodicals. Critical-bibliographical surveys
§126 Past and present. The intellectuals: the decline of Mario Missiroli
§127 Machiavelli
§128 Lorianism. Domenico Giuliotti
§129 Past and present. The Catholics and the state
§130 Encyclopedic notions
§131 Types of periodicals. A regular column on grammar and linguistics
§132 Past and present
§133 Catholic Action. The “Workers' Retreats”
§134 Religious movements
§135 The Italian Risorgimento. Lamennais
§136 Encyclopedic notions
§137 Catholic integralists, Jesuits, Modernists. The case of Abbé Turmel of Rennes
§138 Emperor-worship
§139 Encyclopedic notions
§140 Americanism
§141 Catholic integralists, Jesuits, Modernists
§142 Philosophical novels, utopias, etc.
§143 The international function of Italian intellectuals
§144 Encyclopedic notions
§145 Past and present. Primitive and non-primitive Christianity
§146 Political-military leadership in the war of 1914
§147 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals
§148 Past and present. Inquiries on youth
§149 Past and present. Education
§150 The cosmopolitan function of Italian intellectuals. Risorgimento
§151 Linguistics
§152 Utopias, philosophical novels, etc.
§153 Popular literature
§154 Father Bresciani’s progeny. Cardarelli and “La Ronda”
§155 Father Bresciani’s progeny
§156 Folklore
§157 Sicily
§158 Lorianism. Altimetry, good morals, and intelligence
§159 Risorgimento. The first Italian Jacobins
§160 Renaissance
§161 Encyclopedic notions. “Ascaro”

 


Notebook 5 Transcription/Mark-up: MG, 2003