Skip to main content
Machiavelli without fear or favour
GORDON PARSONS recommends a serious analysis of an intriguing figure was ‘in his intellectual prime, a dissident for all times’
Posthumous portrait of Machiavelli by Santi di Tito [Nickniko/Public domain]

Machiavelli: From Radical to Reactionary
Robert Black
Reaktion Books £17.95

 

IT WOULD be difficult, perhaps, to find a political philosopher with a worse reputation in world history than Niccolo Machiavelli.  

As Robert Black’s final chapter in his concise but impressively comprehensive biography demonstrates, Machiavelli has lent his name to any if not every underhand, deceptive or even malignant political practice in world affairs since the machinations of the Medici rulers of 15th and 16th-century Renaissance Florence where he played an active role.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
cicero
Books / 22 May 2026
22 May 2026

MARTIN HALL examines the way the Roman orator took on different schools of philosophy

divided mind
Book Review / 10 April 2026
10 April 2026

RICHARD SHILLCOCK examines an enjoyable, but philosophically conventional book, and urges Marxists to employ their capacity to embrace the totality in any explanation

benjamin
Books / 6 March 2026
6 March 2026

GORDON PARSONS is intrigued by a biography of the Marxist intellectual and author, made from the point of view of his son

baudrillard
Book Review / 26 September 2025
26 September 2025

ALAN McGUIRE welcomes a biography of the French semiologist and philosopher