'More work! Less pay!'
Rebellion and repression in Italy, 1972–77Phil Edwards
"This is a serious piece of work that deserves a much wider readership than it is likely to get retailing at £60.00. Steal this book! "
Paul Anderson, Red Pepper, August 2010
In the mid-1970s, a wave of contentious radicalism swept through Italy. Groups and movements such as ‘Proletarian youth’, ‘metropolitan Indians’ and ‘the area of Autonomy’ practised new forms of activism, confrontational and often violent. Creative and brutal, intransigent and playful, the movements flourished briefly before being suppressed through heavy policing and political exclusion.
This is the first full-length study in English of these movements. Building on Sidney Tarrow’s ‘cycle of contention’ model and drawing on a wide range of Italian materials, Phil Edwards tells the story of a unique and fascinating group of political movements, and of their disastrous engagement with the mainstream Left. As well as shedding light on a neglected period of twentieth century history, this book offers lessons for understanding today’s contentious movements (‘No Global’, ‘Black Bloc’) and today’s ‘armed struggle’ groups.
This book will be of great interest to scholars in the fields of Italian politics and society; the sociology of social movements; and terrorism and political violence.
Contents
1. Introduction
2. The Hot Autumn and after: a cycle of contention reconsidered
3. From Resistance to Historic Compromise: the politics of the PCI
4. From Feltrinelli to Moro: a second cycle of contention
5. ‘Repudiate all forms of intolerance’: how the movements were framed
6. A cycle and its aftermath
7.Do you remember revolution?
8. Social movements and cycles of contention: theoretical appendix
References
Index
Phil Edwards is Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Manchester
234x156mm 256pp
hb 9780719078736 01 July 2009 £60.00
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