Gramsci, the “Club di vita morale” and the Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
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Keywords

Antonio Gramsci
Club of Moral Life
Marcus Aurelius
Meditations
Stoicism
Teaching Method

How to Cite

Francese, J. (2025). Gramsci, the “Club di vita morale” and the Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. International Gramsci Journal, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.14276/igj.v6i1.4946
Received 2025-02-12
Accepted 2025-03-26
Published 2025-06-30

Abstract

In what follows I analyse elements of stoicism taken by Gramsci from the Meditations di Marcus Aurelius, a text read by Gramsci as a young man, then conveyed to the members of the “Club of Moral Life”, a small study group of young socialists organized in Turin under his direction in 1917-1918. Gramsci uses the Emperor’s memories to teach how and why the individual must comport themselves as ethical and rational members of society and must strive to improve their community through example and teaching. Gramsci also takes from Marcus Aurelius the need to teach the Other to think independently, engage with the new, and attain a democratic view of life, that is, to see the Other as “another myself” who, like the instructor, finds within themself the truth of their life in society and teaches others to do the same. From such a perspective, this goal of self-education (to know oneself better so as to continually become a better person), teach, and act in the political arena (through propaganda and proselytizing) so as to transform ‘molecularly’ the polis are all one and the same.

https://doi.org/10.14276/igj.v6i1.4946
PDF (Italiano)
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Copyright (c) 2025 Joseph Francese