Mario Tronti (1931-2023) is considered one of the most important Italian Marxist philosophers of our time, as well as one of the most influential European political theorists of the Post-War period. Largely untranslated and hence unknown in the anglophone world, this is the second volume of a two-volume translation, The Demon of Politics, presenting an invaluable picture of Trontis political life and intellectual activity through a selection of his most relevant writings.
Volume Two paints a fascinating picture of Trontis work in the 1980, 1990s and 2000s, through his engagement with the traditions of political realism, negative thinking, and political theology. Essays herein also tackle the legacy of the 20th century from the angle of an intense reflection on the relations between history and politics. An introduction written by the editors contextualizes Trontis writings during the second part of his career, while also providing the biographical and political details necessary to understand the evolution of his thought in the latter years. Footnotes throughout the volume provide valuable precisions and elements of contextualization throughout the whole volume. Volume Two includes excerpts of four unpublished interviews with Tronti conducted by the editors.
The volumes of The Demon of Politics offer the most comprehensive edition of Trontis works available to students and scholars.
Introduction. Part 1: Realism and Transcendence (1985-1998)
1. For
Another Political Dictionary (1987)
2. Über das Geistige in der Politik
(1992)
3. Saras Laugh (1992)
4. Politics is Prophecy (1996)
5. Politics,
History, Twentieth Century (1998)
6. Prince and Utopia (1998, La politica al
tramonto)
7. Karl und Carl (1998, La politica al tramonto) Part 2: Thinking
the 20th Century (1999-2015)
8. Politics and Destiny (2001)
9. The Legacy of
What Was (2005)
10. For the Critique of Political Democracy (2005)
11. The
Spirit that Disorders the World (2006)
12. Making Society with Politics
(2008)
13. Walter Benjamin. Theological-Political Fragment (2010)
14. A
Message from the Emperor (2015, Dello spirito libero)
15. The Demon of
Politics and the Angel of History (2019)
16. Weber and Workers (2021)
17. The
Untimely What is to be Done (2023)
Mario Tronti (1931-2023) was a philosopher and politician. In the 1960s he was among the founders of operaismo and later he played a leading role in the Italian Communist Party. He has been a newspaper editor, university professor, president of the Centro per la Riforma dello Stato, and Senator of the Italian Republic. He was the author of Workers and Capital and many other books in Italian.
Michele Filippini is Associate Professor in History of Political Thought at the University of Bologna, Italy. His research interests include the history of Marxism and post-Marxism (Gramsci, workerism, Laclau), the early modern political thought (Machiavelli, Hobbes), mass society in XIX and XX century, and the forms of political legitimation and political power.
Jamila M.H. Mascat is Assistant Professor of Gender and Postcolonial Studies at the Graduate Gender Programme and a research affiliate at the Institute of Cultural Inquiry (ICON) at Utrecht University. Her transdisciplinary research works across the fields of Political Philosophy (German Idealism and Marxism in particular), Postcolonial Studies, Feminist Theories, and Critical Race Theories. Her current research interests focus, on the one hand, on theories of partisanship and political engagement and, on the other hand, on theories of postcolonial justice and postcolonial reparations.
Matteo Cavalleri is an adjunct professor in Department of Political and Social Sciences at the University of Bologna, Italy. He has also held teaching positions at Humboldt University of Berlin and at University of Bergamo. In 2015 he won the Vittorio Sainati Prize. His research interests are developed at the intersection of theoretical analysis and political-historical investigation, with particular reference to the work of G.W.F. Hegel and the theme of freedom; the relationship between anthropology and the historical dimension; the aesthetics and politics of memory and the dialogue between political thought and literature.