Connell, Raewyn. (2012), 'The poet of Autonomy: Antonio Negri as a social theorist', Sociologica, 6(1): 1-23.
In this paper I explore the aspect of Negri’s work that has been underplayed in the controversies, yet is arguably the most important key to its political value: the social theory it contains. I try to specify the main ideas Negri offers about contemporary world society and its dynamics, explore the sources of those ideas, and offer an evaluation.
Appropriately, this paper began in a controversy. Several years after the publication of Empire, Negri was invited to give the keynote speech at a conference at the University of Sydney. Reviving charges from the 1970s, the right-wing Murdoch press – which controls most of Australia’s print media – called Negri an apologist for terrorism and attacked the University of Sydney for inviting him. The speech was cancelled, and a local controversy arose as to whether Negri had been censored, or was simply ill. To vindicate the invitation, I gave a public lecture about Negri’s work, in a series sponsored by the University.
The lecture was published in the Australian literary journal Overland no. 181 in 2005; and a shorter version in Confronting Equality (Allen & Unwin and Polity Press). The new paper develops its ideas.
The lecture was published in the Australian literary journal Overland no. 181 in 2005; and a shorter version in Confronting Equality (Allen & Unwin and Polity Press). The new paper develops its ideas.