4.1 Article

Gramsci, the Relativity of the Integral State-Society, and the COVID-19 Interregnum

Journal

CRITICAL SOCIOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 415-435

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/08969205221086490

Keywords

Gramsci; political sociology; COVID-19 interregnum; state; integral state-society; integral momentum; Far Right; totalitarian tendency

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This article explores the connection between Gramsci's integral state and totalitarian state, and redefines the integral state as integral state-society. It argues that the integral state is fragile but hegemonic if sustained.
Gramscian scholars have engaged with Gramsci's leitmotif ('rhythm of thought') and the stato integrale (integral state), a concept he introduced in Autumn 1930. This represents remarkable progress in the Marxist community. But what requires further attention is the interconnection between an integral state and a totalitarian one, two of the three expressions of state-society formations that Perry Anderson identified as Gramsci's antinomies. This article argues that the integral state is fragile but hegemonic if it can be sustained. Otherwise, it can degenerate into a totalitarian state. The article refigures the 'integral state' as the 'integral state-society'. It exists relatively, depending on whether the 'integral momentum' or the 'totalitarian tendency' prevails in a dynamic interaction between radical Left, Far Right, and those currents in between. Identifying this relativity helps to formulate a deeper understanding of Gramsci's thought and show how his legacy supports a class struggle perspective on the COVID-19 interregnum.

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