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  2. Cultural hegemony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_hegemony

    Gramsci said that cultural and historical analyses of the "natural order of things in society" established by the dominant ideology, would allow common-sense men and women to intellectually perceive the social structures of bourgeois cultural hegemony. In each sphere of life (private and public) common sense is the intellectualism with which ...

  3. Antonio Gramsci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Gramsci

    The notebooks cover a wide range of topics, including the history of Italy and Italian nationalism, the French Revolution, fascism, Taylorism and Fordism, civil society, the state, historical materialism, folklore, religion, and high and popular culture. Gramsci is best known for his theory of cultural hegemony, which describes how the state ...

  4. Marxist cultural analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marxist_cultural_analysis

    Marxist cultural analysis is a form of cultural analysis and anti-capitalist cultural critique, which assumes the theory of cultural hegemony and from this specifically targets those aspects of culture that are profit driven and mass-produced under capitalism. [1] [2] [3] [4]

  5. Subaltern (postcolonialism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subaltern_(postcolonialism)

    Antonio Gramsci coined the term subaltern to identify the cultural hegemony that excludes and displaces specific people and social groups from the socio-economic institutions of society, in order to deny their agency and voices in colonial politics.

  6. Cultural studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_studies

    It is important to recognize that for Gramsci, historical leadership, or hegemony, involves the formation of alliances between class factions, and struggles within the cultural realm of everyday common sense. Hegemony was always, for Gramsci, an interminable, unstable and contested process. [52] Scott Lash writes:

  7. Prison Notebooks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prison_Notebooks

    Gramsci, like the early Marx, was an emphatic proponent of historicism. In Gramsci's view, all meaning derives from the relation between human practical activity (or praxis) and the objective historical and social processes of which it is a part. Ideas cannot be understood outside their social and historical context, apart from their function ...

  8. Counterhegemony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterhegemony

    "Hegemony" was conceptualized by Karl Marx and Antonio Gramsci, a Marxist social philosopher who lived in Mussolini's Italy. Because Gramsci was a Marxist, he subscribed to the basic Marxist premise of the dialectic and therefore the contradiction. In his writings Gramsci claims that intellectuals create both hegemony and counter-hegemony.

  9. Ruling class - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruling_class

    In sociology, the ruling class of a society is the social class who set and decide the political and economic agenda of society.. In Marxist philosophy, the ruling class are the class who own the means of production in a given society and apply their cultural hegemony to determine and establish the dominant ideology (ideas, culture, mores, norms, traditions) of the society.