Hegemony and Culture

Hegemony and Culture
Title Hegemony and Culture PDF eBook
Author David D. Laitin
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Total Pages 266
Release 1986-06-15
Genre History
ISBN 0226467902

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In this ambitious work, David D. Laitin explores the politics of religious change among the Yoruba of Nigeria, then uses his findings to expand leading theories of ethnic and religious politics.

Cultural Hegemony in the United States

Cultural Hegemony in the United States
Title Cultural Hegemony in the United States PDF eBook
Author Lee Artz
Publisher SAGE Publications
Total Pages 349
Release 2000-06-23
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1452221960

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Popular usage equates hegemony with dominance–a meaning far from Antonio Gramsci′s original concept where hegemony appears as a contested culture that meets the minimum needs of the majority while serving the interests of the dominant class. This text is the first to present cultural hegemony in its original form–as a process of consent, resistance, and coercion. Hegemony is illustrated with examples from American history and contemporary culture, including practices that represent race, gender, and class in everyday life. U.S. cultural hegemony depends in part on how well media, government, and other dominant institutions popularize beliefs and organize practices that promote individualism and consumerism. Corporate dominance and market values reign only through the consent of the majority, which, for the time being - finds material, political, and cultural benefit from existing social relations. As deep social contradictions undermine brittle hegemonic relations, the subordinate majority - including blacks, women, and workers will seek a new cultural hegemony that overcomes race, gender, and class inequality.

Culture, Ideology, Hegemony

Culture, Ideology, Hegemony
Title Culture, Ideology, Hegemony PDF eBook
Author K. N. Panikkar
Publisher Anthem Press
Total Pages 229
Release 2002
Genre History
ISBN 184331052X

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This volume explores the interconnections between culture, ideology and hegemony in an effort to understand and explain how Indians came to terms with colonial subjection and envisioned a future for the society in which they lived. The process of exploring the indigenous epistemological tradition and assessing it in the context of advances made by the west was not unilinear and undifferentiated; it was driven with contradictions, contentions and ruptures. Locating intellectual history at the intersection of social and cultural history, the eight essays in this book cover a wide range of issues, moving from an overview of religious and social ideas in colonial India to empirical studies of themes such as indigenous medicine, the family and literary fiction. Professor Panikkar contests both the imperialist and nationalist paradigms of intellectual history. Meticulously researched and lucidly argued, his analysis is illuminated by a rare sensitivity to the nature of class formation and class values, as well as to the material conditions of human existence.

Culture and Hegemony in the Colonial Middle East

Culture and Hegemony in the Colonial Middle East
Title Culture and Hegemony in the Colonial Middle East PDF eBook
Author Y. Noorani
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 245
Release 2010-04-26
Genre History
ISBN 0230106439

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This work is a study of the nature and origin of nationality and modern social ideals in the Middle East, particularly Egypt, in the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries. Bringing together writings on political and social reform with literary works, Noorani challenges dominant assumptions about the emergence of modernity. It shows that while nationalist, liberal, and democratic ideals emerged in the Middle East under European influence, these ideals were nevertheless created out of existing cultural values by reformers and intellectuals. The central element of this process, the book argues, was the transformation of virtue into nationality.

The Dimensions of Hegemony

The Dimensions of Hegemony
Title The Dimensions of Hegemony PDF eBook
Author Craig Brandist
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 310
Release 2015-02-04
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9004276793

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Though generally associated with the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci, the idea of hegemony had a crucial history in revolutionary Russia where it was used to conceptualize the dynamics of political and cultural leadership. Drawing on extensive archival research, this study considers the cultural dimensions of hegemony, with particular focus on the role of language in political debates and in scholarship of the period. It is shown that considerations of the relations between the proletariat and peasantry, the cities to the countryside and the metropolitan centre to the colonies of the Russian Empire demanded an intense dialogue between practical politics and theoretical reflection, which led to critical perspectives now assumed to be the achievements of, for instance, sociolinguistics and post-colonial studies.

Fighting Colonialism with Hegemonic Culture

Fighting Colonialism with Hegemonic Culture
Title Fighting Colonialism with Hegemonic Culture PDF eBook
Author Maureen Trudelle Schwarz
Publisher SUNY Press
Total Pages 250
Release 2013-01-01
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1438445938

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Explores how American Indian businesses and organizations are taking on images that were designed to oppress them. How and why do American Indians appropriate images of Indians for their own purposes? How do these representatives promote and sometimes challenge sovereignty for indigenous people locally and nationally? American Indians have recently taken on a new relationship with the hegemonic culture designed to oppress them. Rather than protesting it, they are earmarking images from it and using them for their own ends. This provocative book adds an interesting twist and nuance to our understanding of the five-hundred year interchange between American Indians and others. A host of examples of how American Indians use the so-called “White Man’s Indian” reveal the key images and issues selected most frequently by the representatives of Native organizations or Native-owned businesses in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries to appropriate Indianness.

Consuming Cultural Hegemony

Consuming Cultural Hegemony
Title Consuming Cultural Hegemony PDF eBook
Author Harisur Rahman
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 253
Release 2019-11-22
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 3030317072

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This book examines the circulation and viewership of Bollywood films and filmi modernity in Bangladesh. The writer poses a number of fundamental questions: what it means to be a Bangladeshi in South Asia, what it means to be a Bangladeshi fan of Hindi film, and how popular film reflects power relations in South Asia. The writer argues that partition has resulted in India holding hegemonic power over all of South Asia’s nation-states at the political, economic, and military levels–a situation that has made possible its cultural hegemony. The book draws on relevant literature from anthropology, sociology, film, media, communication, and cultural studies to explore the concepts of hegemony, circulation, viewership, cultural taste, and South Asian cultural history and politics.