Juan Carlos Portantiero
Juan Carlos Portantiero | |
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Born |
1934 Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Died |
March 9, 2007 Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Alma mater | University of Buenos Aires |
Influences
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Influenced
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Juan Carlos Portantiero (Buenos Aires, 1934 – Buenos Aires, 9 March 2007) was an Argentine sociologist.
He specialized in the study of the works of Antonio Gramsci. With José Aricó and other intellectuals, he was in charge of the magazine Pasado y Presente, which holds a critical view of Marxism.
He graduated in Sociology in University of Buenos Aires, and went into exile during the last illegal military government (1976–1983) because of threats received. He moved into Mexico, where he founded the Controversia journal.
After the return of democracy (1983), he became one of the most respected Argentine scholars and had a direct influence on politics as an advisor to Unión Cívica Radical president Raúl Alfonsín and member of the advising team dubbed Grupo Esmeralda.
He acted as elected dean of UBA's Social Sciences School (1990–1998).
Selected works
- Estudios sobre los orígenes del peronismo ("Studies on the Origins of Peronism", 1970), with Miguel Murmis
- Los orígenes de la sociología clásica ("Origins of Classical Sociology", 1978)
- Estudiantes y política en América Latina ("Students and Politics in Latin America", 1978)
- Estado y sociedad en el pensamiento clásico ("State and Society in the Classical Thinking", 1985)
- Ensayos sobre la transición democrática en la Argentina ("Essays on Argentina's Democratic Transition", 1987)
- Juan B. Justo, el patriarca socialista
External links
- (Spanish) Biography
- (Spanish) Juan Carlos Portantiero died at Clarín