Abstract
This article examines the primary sequences of Mario Tronti’s reflections over approximately
sixty years. Following a singular suggestion from Tronti himself, it argues that within the story
of Italian workerism (and in that of post-workerisms), two different perspectives can be
recognized: an eschatological perspective, with Antonio Negri as its main exponent, and a
‘katechontic’ perspective, which Tronti himself would embody. Although this distinction is
recent, this article shows how traces of the katechontic perspective can already be found in
Tronti’s early works, which began to study capitalist development in the wake of the 1956
crisis. The subsequent theoretical turns—represented by the ‘autonomy of the political’ and
the arrival at ‘political theology’—should therefore be interpreted as consistent developments
of a reflection that, even in historically diverse contexts, always proceeds from the same vision
of the relationship between the factory and society and from the same image of capitalist
Vermassung.
Lingua originale | English |
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pagine (da-a) | 121-145 |
Numero di pagine | 25 |
Rivista | SOFT POWER |
Volume | 10 |
DOI | |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2023 |
Keywords
- Tronti, M.
- Tronti, Mario