Harman Patil (Editor)

Hegemony and Socialist Strategy

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7.8
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Country
  
United Kingdom

Publisher
  
Verso (New Left)

Pages
  
197 (first edition)

Page count
  
197 (Edition)

ISBN
  
860910679

3.9/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1985

Originally published
  
1985

Genre
  
Political philosophy

Subject
  
Political philosophy

Hegemony and Socialist Strategy t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTEyJTn9ZlZihuxja

Media type
  
Print (hardcover and paperback)

Authors
  
Chantal Mouffe, Ernesto Laclau

Similar
  
Ernesto Laclau books, Socialism books

25th anniversary of hegemony and socialist strategy symposium pt 1


Hegemony and Socialist Strategy is a 1985 work of political theory in the post-Marxist tradition by Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe. Developing several sharp divergences from the tenets of canonical Marxist thought, the authors begin by tracing historically varied discursive constitutions of class, political identity, and social self-understanding, and then tie these to the contemporary importance of hegemony as a destabilized analytic which avoids the traps of various procedures Mouffe and Laclau feel constitute a foundational flaw in Marxist thought: essentializations of class identity, the use of a priori interpretative paradigms with respect to history and contextualization, the privileging of the base/superstructure binary above other explicative models.

Contents

Organization

The book is divided into four chapters (~50 pages each). The first two chapters deal with conceptual developments in the manner of an intellectual history, albeit with much more of an eye to disputation and intervention than traditional intellectual history employs. Specifically, Chapter 1 discusses the work of Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Kautsky, Eduard Bernstein, and Georges Sorel (among other texts by major thinkers in the Marxist tradition). Chapter 2's discussion of Gramsci's conception of cultural hegemony is followed by Chapter 3's more politicized development of Laclau and Mouffe's own arguments regarding hegemony's character and constitution. Finally, the fourth chapter argues for the relevance of hegemony as an analytic for the understanding and governance of contemporary politics, political engagement, and self-understanding on the Left.

Reception

Hegemony and Socialist Strategy was greeted with positive reviews and has become a reference point in its field; for example, Marxist philosopher Slavoj Žižek cited Hegemony and Socialist Strategy as a work having influenced his book, The Sublime Object of Ideology. Furthermore, its resolutely "post-Marxist" self-definition marks it as one of the first major texts associated with this disciplinary development. A new edition was published in 2001, which included a preface by the authors in which they reaffirmed their commitment to the arguments made in 1985.

The concept had a great influence on the theory of social movements and post-colonial research and actually marked emergence of post-Marxism as a direction in social sciences.

References

Hegemony and Socialist Strategy Wikipedia