Hegemony. James Martin
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Table of Contents
1 Cover
7 1 What is Hegemony? Domination as Leadership? Power, Subjectivity, Ethics Power – a strategic concept Subjectivity – capturing experience Ethics – uniting leaders and led Chapter Outline
8 2 Gramsci: Hegemony and Revolution Gramsci’s Fusion Revolution and the Italian State Hegemony and the Prison Notebooks Building consent: state and civil society Intellectuals, ideology, and common sense Revolutionary ethics: the ‘Modern Prince’ Tensions in Gramsci’s Analysis Togliatti and the ‘New Party’ Conclusion
9 3 Marxism: Hegemony and the State Consensus Politics? Class Consciousness and Elite Culture Structuralism and the Capitalist State A Dialectic of Structure and Strategy? Popular Culture, Ideology, and Crisis Rebuilding Consent: from Thatcherism to Populism Conclusion
10 4 Post-Marxism: Hegemony and Radical Democracy Politics in Fragments Deconstructing Marxism Subjects of Discourse Radical Democracy and Pluralism A Populism of the Left? Conclusion
11 5 Beyond the State: Hegemony in the World Leading the World Gramsci and International Relations A New Global Order? Global Subjects Counter-Hegemony Conclusion
12 6 The End of Hegemony? Radical Politics Without Hegemony Power and Ontology Affective Subjectivity Ethics of Commitment A Moment for Strategy Conclusion
13 References
14 Index
Guide
1 Cover
2 Table of Contents
Pages
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