Antonio Gramsci was a leader of the Italian Communist Party. He was imprisoned by the Mussolini regime in 1926 and remained there for 20 years. During this time, he wrote extensively in what is now famously known as the prison notebooks. These are essays by Gramsci that total thousands of pages, historical analysis, philosophical treatises, Covering a wide range of topics. One of the most important concepts to come out of these notebooks is Gramsci's contribution to the theories of ideology.
And importantly, this concept of hegemony. So this video will cover a few of Gramsci's contributions to ideology. The definition for how Gramsci considers ideology is pretty simple to understand, I think.
I'm going to read you a quote from, this is written by Bates, from the reading Gramsci and the Theory of Hegemony, written in 1975. He says, The concept of hegemony is really a very simple one. It means political leadership based on the consent of the led, a consent which is secured by the diffusion and popularization of the world view of the ruling class. So according to Gramsci, all of the proletariat, to use Marx's term, consents to being ruled by the ruling class.
And this is the process of hegemony, this consent. Most people use hegemony as the process by which the ruling class disseminate their ideas and gain the consent. of the lower classes.
You might sometimes hear the term hegemonic process or something like this. That's the process by which the ruling class goes through in order to get the consent. of the lower classes. Now, of course, this isn't formal, overt consent, right?
You don't have to sign a consent form or something like that. But Gramsci says that just by living their daily lives, the working class is consenting to being ruled by the ruling class as a result of this process of hegemony. I'm going to read you another quote about Gramsci's theories. This comes from the reading Ideology, Hegemony, Discourse, A Critical Review of Theories of Knowledge and Power.
So he says, Among the advances made by Gramscian theory is the attention to hegemonic power as often implicit, common sense, rather than a coherent body of thought, which is inherently unfinished and historically contingent. It is the embodiment of hegemony in everyday common sense. through the mundane activities connected with work school the family and the church that secures the consent of capitals sub-altern classes so just as a result of us living our daily lives of the lower class living their daily lives they are consenting to being ruled by the ruling class and what's crucial for gromshe and this process of hegemony is that this is never ending this is an ongoing process that is happening every second of every day of every person's living life as they work as they go to school as they go to church as they consume the media as they do all of these things they are consenting to being ruled by the ruling class it's important here to point out the difference between consent and coercion because oftentimes these sort of when we imagine ideology and how the ruling class comes to adopt i'm sorry the working class comes to adopt to the ideas of the ruling class We sort of view it as it being imposed on them through force. And the Gramscian theory of hegemony...
It's crucial to point out that this isn't coercion. This is consent. It's not as if the ruling class is using their military to impose these values and ideas on the lower class.
They're using consent. So they're not using violence, which would be coercion. It's much more subtle than that. And it's voluntary on the part of the working class. In fact, there's not much opposition on their part to these ideas.
He talks about also the importance of of what he calls counter-hegemony. It's important to point out that for Marx and his conception of ideology, the battleground between the two classes is in the motor production. So as we'll discuss later on in our conversations, the motor production that promotes the bourgeoisie to be at the top is capitalism.
Marx argues that the motor production of communism will be a result in which the working class will take power. But the battleground is in this economic system is in how members of society produce and reproduce their means of existence and that's where the fight takes place for Gramsci the fight takes place at the ideological level hegemony is the battle and the battle is whose ideas become widely accepted in society. So for Gramsci, the working class must enter into that ideological battle, must enter into the hegemonic process, so that their ideas can become more powerful than the ideas of the ruling class.
And like I said, this is never... this is a never-ending process that the he calls them subaltern is an important term for Gramscian theory the subaltern classes must take social power ideological power normative power they must enter into this battleground and contest with the ruling class at the ideological the hegemonic level that's crucial also for Gramsci there is never a total all-encompassing sort of final set of ideologies, that this is always a battleground, that there is never a fully sort of quote-unquote finished, fully all-encompassing set of ideas, that there will always be a conflicting ideology in society, there will always be some ideology, oppositional ideology in any given society. So the big term from Gramsci here is hegemony.
This consent that the subaltern classes sort of provide to the ruling class, subjecting themselves to the rule of the ruling class. Hegemony being sort of the process, the battleground. at which this takes place.
So the hegemonic process would be the process by which the ruling class sort of gets the consent of the subaltern classes for them to adopt their ideas as their own. And the battleground itself is this hegemonic process. The ideas themselves are what are conflicting with one another and the subaltern class and their ideas conflict with the bourgeois class and their ideas rather than in the Marxist conception when the battleground is the economic system, the material reality itself. So that's, in a nutshell, Gramsci's idea of hegemony and how it relates to ideology.