Antonio Negri

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Antonio Negri (August 1, 1933- ) is a moral and political philosopher from Italy.

Negri is perhaps best-known for his co-authorship of Empire and his work on Spinoza. Born in Padua, he became a political philosophy professor in his hometown university. Negri founded Potere Operaio (Worker Power) group in 1969 and was a leading member of the Autonomia Marxist group. Accused in the early 1980s of being the mastermind behind the May 1978 assassination of Aldo Moro, leader of Christian-Democrat Party, Negri was later cleared of any links with the Red Brigades who had carried out Moro's kidnapping. He was, however, sentenced to a long-term prison sentence on controversial charges of "association and insurrection against the state". Negri went into exile in France and taught at the Université de Vincennes (Paris-VIII) and the Collège International de Philosophie, along with Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze. In 1997, he voluntarily returned to Italy to serve the end of his sentence. He now divides his time between Rome, Venice and Paris.

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Early years

Antonio (Toni) Negri was born in Padua, Italy in 1933. He had a stellar academic career at the University of Padua and was promoted to full professor at a young age in the field of "dottrina dello Stato" (State theory), a particularly Italian field that deals with juridical and constitutional theory.

He began his career as a militant in the 1950s with the activist Catholic youth organization Gioventú Italiana di Azione Cattolica (GIAC). He joined the International Socialist Party in 1956 and remained a member until 1963, while at the same time becoming more and more engaged throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s in Marxist movements.

In the early 1960s Negri joined the editorial group of Quaderni Rossi, a journal that represented the intellectual rebirth of Marxism in Italy outside of the realm of the communist party.

In 1969, Negri became well-known as one of the founders of the group "Potere Operaio" (Worker Power) and the operaismo (workerist) communist movement. Potere Operaio disbanded in 1973 and gave rise to the Autonomia group.

He wrote with many other famous autonomists associated with the movements of Italian workers, students and feminists of the 1960s and 70s, including Raniero Panzieri, Mario Tronti, Sergio Bologna, Romano Alquati, Mariarosa Dalla Costa and Franco Berardi.

Arrest and Exile

On April 7, 1979, at the age of forty-six, Antonio Negri was arrested along with the others leaders of Autonomia (O. Scalzone, E. Vesce, A. Del Re, L. Ferrari Bravo, F. Piperno...). Attorney Pietro Calogero (close to the PCI) accused the Autonomia group of being the mastermind behind left-wing "terrorism" in Italy. Negri was charged with a number of offenses including leadership of the Red Brigades, masterminding the 1978 kidnapping and murder of Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro and plotting to overthrow the government. At the time, Negri was a political science professor at the University of Padua, visiting lecturer at Paris' École Normale Supérieure and self-proclaimed Marxist revolutionary and advocate of armed insurrection.

A year later, Negri was exonerated from Aldo Moro's kidnapping. No link was ever established between Negri and the Red Brigades and almost all of the charges against him (including 17 murders) were dropped within months of his arrest due to lack of evidence. Those who support the hypothesis of the Gladio organization being behind Aldo Moro's death see his arrest as an attempt to cover its hidden responsibilities. Negri was convicted of crimes of association and insurrection against the state (a charge that was later dropped) and in 1984 sentenced to 30 years in jail. In 1986, Negri was sentenced to an additional four and a half years on the basis that he was morally responsible for acts of violence between activists and the police during the 1960s and 1970s largely due to his writing and association with revolutionary causes and groups. Amnesty International drew attention to the "serious legal irregularities" in the handling of the Negri case. French philosopher Michel Foucault later commented, "Isn't he in jail simply for being an intellectual?" Template:Ref.

In 1983, four years after his arrest and while he was still in prison awaiting trial, Negri was elected to the Italian legislature as a member for Marco Pannella's Radical Party. A parliamentary privilege that allowed Negri to leave prison in order to serve in an elected position was revoked by the Chamber of Deputies a few months later. At this point, he fled to France where he remained for 14 years, writing and teaching, protected from extradition by the French government of François Mitterrand.

In France, Negri began teaching at the Université de Paris VIII (Saint Denis) and the Collège International de Philosophie, founded by Jacques Derrida. Although the conditions of his residence in France prevented him from engaging in political activities he wrote prolifically and was active in a broad coalition of left-wing intellectuals. In 1990 Negri with Jean-Marie Vincent and Denis Berger founded the journal Futur Antérieur. The journal ceased publication in 1998 but was reborn as Multitudes in 2000, with Negri as a member of the international editorial board.

In 1997, Negri returned to Italy voluntarily to serve the remainder of his sentence (which had since been reduced on appeal to 17 years), in the hope that this act would raise awareness of the situation of hundreds of exiles and prisoners (including Adriano Sofri from Lotta continua) involved in radical left political activities in Italy during the 1960s and 1970s, the so-called "anni di piombo" (the lead years). Negri was released from prison in the spring of 2003, having served his full sentence of 17 years. "I am taking up my political work again starting from the ground up, from prison," said Negri, who wrote "La Anomalia Salvaje" and "Empire" in his captivity time. "With my return, I would like to give a push to the generation that was marginalized by the anti-terrorist laws of the 1970s so that they will leave their internal or foreign exile and again take part in public and democratic life."

Political thought and writings

Among the central themes in Negri's work are Marxism, democratic globalization, Anti-capitalism, Postmodernism, Neoliberalism, Democracy, the Commons, and the Multitudes. His prolific, iconoclastic, cosmopolitan, highly original and often dense and difficult philosophical writings attempt to reconcile critical terms with most of the major global intellectual movements of the past half-century in the service of a new Marxist analysis of capitalism.

Although he acknowledges the influence of Michel Foucault, David Harvey's The Condition of Post Modernity (1989), Fredric Jameson's Postmodernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (1991) and Gilles Deleuze & Felix Guattari's Capitalism and Schizophrenia, Negri is extremely dismissive of postmodernism, whose only value, in his estimation, is that it has served as a symptom of the historical transition whose dynamics he and Hardt set out to explain in Empire.

Today, Antonio Negri is best known as the co-author, with Michael Hardt, of the book Empire (2000). The striking thesis of Empire is that the globalization and informatization of world markets since the late 1960s have led to a progressive decline in the sovereignty of nation-states and the emergence of a new form of sovereignty, composed of a series of national and supranational organisms united under a single logic of rule. This new global form of sovereignty is what the authors call Empire. This shift represents "the real subsumption of social existence by capital." He calls for autonomous constitutive resistance epitomyzed by the Wobblies. The book has had widespread influence. It has inspired many initiatives including No Border network, Libre Society, KEIN.ORG, NEURO-networking europe, and D-A-S-H. A follow-up to Empire, called Multitude, was published in August of 2004.

An alternative to the strictly political characterisations of Negri's project comes from a neoliberal critic, John J. Reilly, who calls Empire "a postmodern plot to overthrow the City of God." In fact, Negri's involvement in the early 1950s with the Catholic Worker Movement and liberation theology seems to have left a permanent mark upon his thought. One of his most recent works, Time for Revolution (2003), relies heavily on themes drawn from Augustine of Hippo and Baruch Spinoza and might be described as an attempt to found the City of God without the aid of the "transcendental illusions" and the "Theology of Power" that he finds in thinkers as disparate as Martin Heidegger and John Maynard Keynes, extending and attempting to correct the critique of ideology as false consciousness set forth by Karl Marx.

Now in his 70s, Negri continues to teach and write. He divides his time between Rome, Venice and Paris, where he delivers political seminars at the Collège International de Philosophie and the Université Paris I.

Endnotes

Books in English by Antonio Negri

  • Antonio Negri, Time for Revolution. Translated by Matteo Mandarini. New York: Continuum, 2003.
  • Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri Empire, Harvard University Press, 2000. (full text online in PDF format)
  • Antonio Negri, Marx Beyond Marx: Lessons on the Grundrisse, New York: Autonomedia, 1991.
  • Antonio Negri, The Politics of Subversion: A Manifesto for the Twenty-First Century, Cambridge: Polity Press, 1989.

Articles by Antonio Negri

Other Links about Antonio Negri

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