Full Description
Military metaphors have long played a role in framing questions of Marxist political strategy. Most famously, Gramsci articulated much of his social theory in terms of wars of position and wars of manoeuvre. In this work, Daniel Egan argues that previous commentators have viewed the distinction between these two phases of struggle too statically.
Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Marxism and the Military Metaphor
2. Gramsci's Marxism
Working Class Organization and Revolutionary Politics
Political Relations of Power
3. War of Maneuver and War of Position
War as Metaphor
Analysis of the Metaphor
4. Marxism and Insurrection
Engels and Insurrection
Lenin, Trotsky and Insurrection
The Communist International and Insurrection
The Gramscian Nature of Insurrection
5. Soviet Military Doctrine
Creating the Red Army
Soviet Military Science: Tactics, Operational Art, Strategy
Deep Battle and Gramsci's War of Position
6 Marxism and Guerrilla Warfare
People's War
The Foco
The Gramscian Character of Guerrilla Warfare
7. Conclusion: Lessons for Socialist Political Strategy
The Dialectic of Position and Maneuver
The Gramscian War of Position and Twenty-First Century Socialism
References
Index



