Dictionary Definition
hegemony n : the domination of one state over its
allies
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From (hēgemonia) "supremacy" or "leadership", which comes from hegeisthai "to lead".Pronunciation
Noun
- Domination, influence, or authority over another, especially by
one political group over a society or by one nation over others
(e.g.: internationally among nation-states, and regionally over
social classes, between languages or even culture).
- The two political parties battled viciously for hegemony.
Derived terms
Translations
domination, influence, or authority over another
Extensive Definition
Hegemony ( (Amer.), /hɨˈɡɛməni/ (Brit.)) () is a concept that has been
used to describe the existence of dominance
of one social group over another, such that the ruling
group—referred to as a hegemon—acquires some degree of consent from
the subordinate, as opposed to dominance purely by force. It is
used broadly to mean any kind of dominance, and narrowly to refer
to specifically cultural and non-military dominance, as opposed to
the related notions of empire and suzerainty.
In International
Relations, a hegemon may be defined or power that can dictate
the policies of all other powers in its vicinity, or that is able
to defeat any other power or combination of powers that it might be
at war with. Examples of (potentially) hegemonic states in history
are the Roman
Empire, the British
Empire and the united
Germany that has existed from 1871 to 1945 and the United
States from 1991 onwards.
The processes by which a dominant culture
maintains its dominant position: for example, the use of
institutions to formalize power; the employment of a bureaucracy to
make power seem abstract (and, therefore, not attached to any one
individual); the inculcation of the populace in the ideals of the
hegomonic group through education, advertising, publication, etc.;
the mobilization of a police force as well as military personnel to
subdue opposition.
Definitions
Researchers use hegemony to explain how dominant groups or individuals can maintain their power -- the capacity of dominant classes to persuade subordinate ones to accept, adopt and internalize their values and norms. Antonio Gramsci devised one of the best-known accounts of hegemony. His theory defined the State by a mixture of coercion and hegemony, between which he drew distinctions. According to Gramsci, hegemony consists of socio-political power that flows from enabling the "spontaneous consent" of the populace through intellectual and moral leadership or authority as employed by the subalterns of the State. The power of the hegemony is thus primarily through coercion and consent rather than armed force. Such conceptions are sometimes referred to as "cultural hegemony."Recently, Ernesto
Laclau and Chantal
Mouffe have re-defined the term "hegemony" as a discursive
strategy of combining principles from different systems of thought
into one coherent ideology.
Hegemonies in history
The word "hegemony" originated in ancient
Greece and
derives from the word hegeisthai (meaning "to lead"). An early
example of hegemony during ancient Greek
history occurred when Sparta became the
hegemon of the Peloponnesian
League in the 6th century
BC. Later, in 337 BC, Philip
II of Macedon became the personal Hegemon of the League of
Corinth, a position he passed on to his son Alexander
the Great.
The concept of "Hegemony" was also present in
ancient China, during the
Spring
and Autumn Period (ca. 770 BC - 480 BC), when the weakening of
the Zhou
Dynasty led to increased autonomy amongst the feudal lords of
the period. The
hegemons, known as "Ba" (Chinese: 霸), were often appointed by
conferences of feudal lords, and they were nominally obliged to
uphold the supremacy of the Zhou kings and keep order amongst
subordinate states.
The term hegemon is also used to describe
Japan's three
unifiers in the late sixteenth century and early seventeenth
century. Oda
Nobunaga, Toyotomi
Hideyoshi and Tokugawa
Ieyasu each had different titles (and held many different posts
during their lifetimes), but each had in common that they exercised
hegemony over all or much of Japan. For ease of reference they are
collectively referred to as the three hegemons or the three
unifiers.
To the extent that hegemony appears as a cultural
phenomenon, cultural institutions maintain it. The Medici maintained
their hegemony in Tuscany through control of Florence's major
guild, the Arte della Lana. Modern hegemonies also maintain
themselves through cultural institutions, often with allegedly
"voluntary" membership.
The dominance of the Dutch Republic during the
17th Century (1609-1672) can be considered one of the first
instances of a "global" hegemon, with a focus on mercantilism. This
was due to its development of wind power and shipping which enabled
it to develop as a hegemon because of production efficiency. It
then gained a commercial advantage through the generation of the
'Four Great Fleets' and later gained financial dominance, with the
emergence of the stock market in Amsterdam.
During much of the rather absolutist reign of
Louis XIV (1638-1715), France dominated most of Europe
economically, culturally, and militarily. Monarchs imitated his
court and style, even paying tribute as vassal status in many
cases, while the Papacy could not effect even bishopric
appointments, let alone secular politics.
In more recent times, analysts have used the term
hegemony in a more abstract sense to describe the "proletarian
dictatorships" of
the 20th century, resulting in regional domination by local
powers, or domination of the world by a global power. China's
position of dominance in East Asia for
most of its history offers an example of the regional
hegemony.
The Cold War (1945 -
1990), with its main avenues of coercion, cooperation, and
attraction - the Warsaw Pact,
led by the USSR and
NATO, led by
the United
States &mdash, is often referred to as a struggle of
hegemons and hegemonies. The details of the parties' respective
ideologies have no relevance to whether they were hegemonies: both
sides featured superpowers, supported by a
coalition and/or alliance of their allies, friends, satellites,
clients, and
vassals, struggling to achieve dominance over the other, in
multiple dimensions and multiple forums, including through military
superiority, the arena of hearts and
minds, cultural superiority, ideological superiority, and
technological superiority, and become the dominant hegemony
worldwide. Of course, the details of the ideologies of both
parties--and the deeds that that each party did in the service of
their respective ideologies--for example, the Soviet intervention
into the Hungarian revolution, or the United States intervention
into the Vietnamese revolution--did come into play to the extent
that they determined the persuasiveness and efficacy of each
hegemony.
After the end of the Cold War, some analysts used
the term "hegemony" to describe the United States' role as the sole
superpower (or, in the words of Hubert
Védrine, as a "hyperpower") in the modern
world. However, many scholars of international relations (such as
John
Mearsheimer or Joseph Nye)
argue that the United States does not have true hegemony, since it
lacks the resources to impose dominance over the entire globe.
While the United States has dominance on political-military issues,
it is equal to Europe on the economic scale, and has very little
influence on transnational relations by non-state actors. Also,
China, India,
and the European
Union are considered by some to be emerging superpowers capable
of or already competing with the United States.
Hegemony in fiction
In the fictionary universe Matrix, created by the Wachowski brothers, robots have taken over the entire world. Humans are a subordinate race, in which 99% of humans unconsciously accept their rule, and 1% rebel against the robots and live in Zion. When the rebels grow too strong, "The One" is added to the Matrix to reboot it.The novel Valis by the science
fiction writer Philip K.
Dick treats the concept of hegemony as one aspect of what he
calls the Black
Iron Prison, a totalised system of social control.
In Bulgakov's
novel, The
Master and Margarita, the imprisoned Christ is told to
address the Roman procurator, Pontius
Pilate, as "Hegemon". After a false start, and threats of
further corporal
punishment, Christ complies with the order.
Ursula K.
LeGuin uses the concept of Hegemony to create a rich universe
to set her stories and novels. The worlds are bound together by the
hegemon which uses diplomacy, education, and patience to win new
member worlds.
Orson
Scott Card used the title 'Hegemon' to describe the office of
world leader taken by the fictional character Peter
Wiggin, the brother of Andrew (Ender)
Wiggin. The story of Peter's rise to dominance is (partly) told
in the science
fiction novel Ender's
Game, and more fully in the 'Shadow' series. Peter uses his
great intelligence and political savvy to manipulate public opinion
by publishing under the pseudonym of "Locke". Peter persuaded his
sister, Valentine
Wiggin, to publish opposing viewpoints that were widely
supported by the common people under the guise of "Demosthenes".
The educated and political communities, fearing the power
Demosthenes held with the common people, consequently supported
Locke, a more moderate writer in their opinion. Ironically, once
Peter attains the office, he finds that it has little actual power,
contrary to what the title would lead one to believe, though he
then gains power by acting as a traditional hegemon.
Dan Simmons'
Hyperion
Cantos also features an interstellar society called 'The
Hegemony of Man'. The Hegemony includes all of the several hundred
planets colonized by the human race, as well as space stations and
outlying colonies. The Hegemony funds and maintains an
interplanetary military/police entity called FORCE, and two hundred
or so Hegemony planets are linked together by the farcaster network to comprise
the WorldWeb. The TechnoCore and
the Ousters
are not included in the Hegemony.
Robert
A. Heinlein referred several times to the "Chinese Hegemony" in
his novel, "Starship
Troopers".
In the Joan D.
Vinge novel The
Snow Queen, the government of civilized planets is called the
Hegemony, or the Hedge; they are the remnants of a defunct greater
empire.
In Battletech,
there is an interstellar government called the Terran Hegemony,
lasting from the early 24th century to the late 28th century. The
government is more akin to a constitutional monarchy than anything
else.
In
Star Control 3, the player struggled against the Hegemonic
Crux, a hegemony of races dominated by the Ploxis, an
intelligent, bird-like race of aliens.
In Star Trek
(especially Deep Space
Nine), the Breen race is
represented by a government called the "Breen Hegemony". In one
Next Generation episode, the "European Hegemony" is described
as a loose alliance of states in the early 22nd century, and is
assumed to no longer exist. Also the Gorn race encountered by Kirk
in the original Star Trek series are referred to as having a
Hegemony.
In Iain M. Banks's Culture
novels, a "Hegemonising Swarm" is a hive-like organism that seeks
to make everything in the galaxy a part of it. It is described as
one potential Outside
Context Problem for the Culture.
The Covenant in Halo
(series) is a religious hegemony.
The Hegemony in Lilith
Saintcrow's Dante Valentine series is one of two global
superpowers. The Hegemony borders dominate North and South America,
Western Europe, Japan, Australia, some of Central Asia, and parts
of China. Its counterpart is the Putchkin Alliance, centered around
what was known as Russia. Many of the citizens of either superpower
feel as though there is one world government with the Hegemony and
Putchkin Alliance as two major political divisions.
In Star Wars the
Tion
Hegemony is a small power set up by the Galactic
Empire out of an older state and was left mostly to its own
devices until a strong Rebel movement took hold in the
Hegemony.
Geography of hegemonies
Hegemony does not leave geography untouched. Henri Lefebvre's theory of space, as articulated in "The Production of Space", insists that space is not a passive locus of social relations and that space is trialectical. That is space is comprised of mental space, social space and physical space. This said, hegemony can be read as a spatial process. (See Edward Soja, David Harvey, Chantal Mouffe)Geopolitics
influences hegemonies. Ancient hegemonies developed in fertile
river valleys (an example of hydraulic
despotism): Egypt, China and the
succession of states in Mesopotamia. In
China during the Warring
States Era the state of Qin created
artificial waterways (such as the Chengkuo
Canal) in order to give itself an advantage over its
neighboring rival states. Hegemonic successor
states in Eurasia tended to cluster around the Middle East
for a period, using either the sea (Greece) or the fringe lands
(Persia,
Arabia). The
focus of European hegemony moved west to Rome, then northwards
to the Franks and the
Holy
Roman Empire. The Atlantic seaboard had its heyday (Spain, France, Britain)
before the fringes of the European cultural area took over in the
twentieth century (United States, Soviet Union).
Some regions show continually fluctuating areas
of regional hegemony: India, for example,
or the Balkans. Other regions show relative stability: northern
China offers a case in point.
Long-lived hegemonies (China, Pax Sinica;
Rome, Pax
Romana) offer a contrast to shorter dominations: the Mongol
Empire or Japan's
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
Resistance and survival
Conrad Phillip Kottak, in Window on Humanity
(2004), explains hegemony in terms of ideologies that offer
explanations about why the existing order is in everyone's
interest. Many things are promised, but are said to take time and
patience in order for them to happen.
References
See also
Hegemony
- Hegemony or Survival, a book by Noam Chomsky
- The Prince, a book by Niccolò Machiavelli
- Spartan hegemony (404 B.C.E. - 371 B.C.E.)
- Theban hegemony (371 B.C.E. - 362 B.C.E.)
Other related concepts
External links
hegemony in Bulgarian: Хегемония
hegemony in Catalan: Hegemonia
hegemony in Czech: Hegemonie
hegemony in Welsh: Hegemoni
hegemony in Danish: Hegemoni
hegemony in German: Hegemonie
hegemony in Esperanto: Hegemonio
hegemony in Spanish: Hegemonía
hegemony in Estonian: Hegemoonia
hegemony in Persian: هژمونی
hegemony in Finnish: Hegemonia
hegemony in Galician: Hexemonía
hegemony in Hebrew: הגמוניה
hegemony in Icelandic: Forræði
hegemony in Italian: Egemonia
hegemony in Japanese: 覇権
hegemony in Korean: 헤게모니
hegemony in Lithuanian: Hegemonija
hegemony in Dutch: Hegemonie
hegemony in Norwegian Nynorsk: Hegemoni
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hegemony in Polish: Hegemonia
hegemony in Portuguese: Hegemonia
hegemony in Russian: Гегемония
hegemony in Simple English: Hegemony
hegemony in Serbian: Хегемонија
hegemony in Swedish: Hegemoni
hegemony in Ukrainian: Гегемонія
hegemony in Chinese: 霸权主义