One lets  a man starve until he is fifty; when he is fifty, one finally notices him. In  private life, such behaviour would warrant a good kicking. In the case of the  State, it appears to be a “merit” (1933).
    Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937)
  Even today, our  States and their actors tell the same story. This explains the continued appeal  of Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks for our cultural theorists and  political commentators, including Raymond Williams, Stuart Hall, Edward Said,  and Terry Eagleton, and the New Left Review contributors. Gramsci’s  relentless conflict with alternative and oppositional forces finds the most  lucid and extended expression in his Prison Notebooks. 
  Selections  from the Prison Notebooks,translated, edited,  and annotated helpfully in this edition, will make it easier for both the  seasoned scholar and budding researcher who wish to study Gramsci’s salient  reflections and political observations. 
  Gramsci’s major  ideas and sketches of polemical thought have been ordered under larger units in  this book. The introductory essay places the Notebooks in their  socio-historical background. The considerable range of their address and focus  will inspire and challenge students who have only had limited access to  Gramscian terminology, such as hegemony, national-popular, subaltern, war of  position, organic intellectual, etc.  
  This book is a  precious resource for scholars and students from a wide range of disciplines,  including anthropology, sociology, political science, history, geography,  education, cultural studies and literary studies.