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  2. Cultural hegemony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_hegemony

    In Marxist philosophy, cultural hegemony is the dominance of a culturally diverse society by the ruling class who shape the culture of that society—the beliefs and explanations, perceptions, values, and mores—so that the worldview of the ruling class becomes the accepted cultural norm. [1]

  3. 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.

  4. Neo-Marxism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Marxism

    Examples of neo-Marxism include analytical Marxism, French structural Marxism, political Marxism, critical theory, cultural studies, as well as some forms of feminism. Erik Olin Wright 's [ 9 ] theory of contradictory class locations is an example of the syncretism found in neo-Marxist thought, as it incorporates Weberian sociology, and ...

  5. Neo-Gramscianism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Gramscianism

    Neo-Gramscianism is a critical theory approach to the study of international relations (IR) and the global political economy (GPE) that explores the interface of ideas, institutions and material capabilities as they shape the specific contours of the state formation.

  6. 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.

  7. Antonio Gramsci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Gramsci

    The need to create a working-class culture and a counter-hegemony relates to Gramsci's call for a kind of education that could develop working-class intellectuals, whose task was not to introduce Marxist ideology into the consciousness of the proletariat as a set of foreign notions but to renovate the existing intellectual activity of the ...

  8. Subaltern (postcolonialism) - Wikipedia

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

    In discussions of the meaning of the term subaltern in the work of Gramsci, Spivak said that he used the word as a synonym for the proletariat (a code word to deceive the prison censor to allow his manuscripts out the prison), [5] but contemporary evidence indicates that the term was a novel concept in Gramsci's political theory. [6]

  9. Cultural materialism (cultural studies) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_materialism...

    Following in the tradition of Herbert Marcuse, Antonio Gramsci and others, cultural materialists extend the class-based analysis of traditional Marxism (Neo-Marxism) by means of an additional focus on the marginalized.