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- Hegemony abstract "Hegemony (UK /hɨˈɡɛməni/, US /hɨˈdʒɛməni/; Greek: ἡγεμονία hēgemonía, "leadership" and "rule") is an indirect form of government, and of imperial dominance in which the hegemon (leader state) rules geopolitically subordinate states by the implied means of power, the threat of force, rather than by direct military force. In Ancient Greece (8th century BCE – 6th century CE), hegemony denoted the politico–military dominance of a city-state over other city-states.In the 19th century, hegemony denoted the geopolitical and the cultural predominance of one country upon others; from which derived hegemonism, the Great Power politics meant to establish European hegemony upon continental Asia and Africa. In the 20th century, Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937) developed the philosophy and the sociology of geopolitical hegemony into the theory of cultural hegemony, whereby one social class can manipulate the system of values and mores of a society, in order to create and establish a ruling class Weltanschauung, a worldview that justifies the status quo of bourgeois domination of the other social classes of the society.In the praxis of hegemony, imperial dominance is established by means of cultural imperialism, whereby the leader state (hegemon) dictates the internal politics and the societal character of the subordinate states that constitute the hegemonic sphere of influence, either by an internal, sponsored government or by an external, installed government. The imposition of the hegemon's way of life — an imperial lingua franca and bureaucracies (social, economic, educational, governing) — transforms the concrete imperialism of direct military domination into the abstract power of the status quo, indirect imperial domination. Under hegemony, rebellion (social, political, economic, armed) is eliminated either by co-optation of the rebels or by suppression (police and military), without direct intervention by the hegemon; examples are the latter-stage Spanish and British Empires, the 19th and 20th century Reichs of unified Germany (1871–1945), and by the end of the twentieth century, the United States.".
- Hegemony thumbnail 362BCThebanHegemony.png?width=300.
- Hegemony wikiPageExternalLink books?id=Nhq3fV6tWfwC.
- Hegemony wikiPageExternalLink hegemony.htm.
- Hegemony wikiPageExternalLink 27world-t.html?ex=1359176400&en=1af8c9c386cc212d&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink.
- Hegemony wikiPageExternalLink hegemony_online.htm.
- Hegemony wikiPageID "53451".
- Hegemony wikiPageRevisionID "605892467".
- Hegemony hasPhotoCollection Hegemony.
- Hegemony subject Category:Cultural_hegemony.
- Hegemony subject Category:Forms_of_government.
- Hegemony subject Category:Hegemony.
- Hegemony subject Category:International_relations_theory.
- Hegemony subject Category:Marxist_theory.
- Hegemony comment "Hegemony (UK /hɨˈɡɛməni/, US /hɨˈdʒɛməni/; Greek: ἡγεμονία hēgemonía, "leadership" and "rule") is an indirect form of government, and of imperial dominance in which the hegemon (leader state) rules geopolitically subordinate states by the implied means of power, the threat of force, rather than by direct military force.".
- Hegemony label "Egemonia".
- Hegemony label "Hegemonia".
- Hegemony label "Hegemonia".
- Hegemony label "Hegemonie".
- Hegemony label "Hegemonie".
- Hegemony label "Hegemony".
- Hegemony label "Hegemonía".
- Hegemony label "Гегемония".
- Hegemony label "覇権".
- Hegemony label "霸权主义".
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonie.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonie.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonía.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonia.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemoni.
- Hegemony sameAs Egemonia.
- Hegemony sameAs 覇権.
- Hegemony sameAs 패권.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonie.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonia.
- Hegemony sameAs Hegemonia.
- Hegemony sameAs m.0f05r.
- Hegemony sameAs Q182034.
- Hegemony sameAs Q182034.
- Hegemony wasDerivedFrom Hegemony?oldid=605892467.
- Hegemony depiction 362BCThebanHegemony.png.
- Hegemony isPrimaryTopicOf Hegemony.