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Common-sense Constructivism and Hegemony in World Politics

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  • Hopf, Ted

Abstract

The IR literature on hegemony rarely combines attention to material power and ideas. Cox's neo-Gramscian work is a rare exception, but it too narrowly construes Gramsci's conceptualization of common sense, reducing it to elite views on political economy. But Gramsci argued that hegemony had to reckon with mass quotidian common sense. If political elites do not take into account the taken-for-granted world of the masses, elite ideological projects would likely founder against daily practices of resistance. In this article, I show how mass common sense can be an obstacle to an elite hegemonic project aimed at moving a great power into the core of the world capitalist economy. In contemporary Russia, a ruling elite with a neoliberal project is being thwarted daily by a mass common sense that has little affinity with democratic market capitalism. Scholarly work on future Chinese, Brazilian, or Indian participation in constructing a new hegemonic order would do well to pay attention to the mass common senses prevailing in those societies

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  • Hopf, Ted, 2013. "Common-sense Constructivism and Hegemony in World Politics," International Organization, Cambridge University Press, vol. 67(2), pages 317-354, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:intorg:v:67:y:2013:i:02:p:317-354_00
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    Cited by:

    1. Senem Aydın‐Düzgit & Gergana Noutcheva, 2022. "External Contestations of Europe: Russia and Turkey as Normative Challengers?," Journal of Common Market Studies, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 60(6), pages 1815-1831, November.
    2. Ferragina, Emanuele & Zola, Andrew, 2020. "An obituary for austerity narratives? An experimental analysis of public opinion shifts and class dynamics during the Covid-19 crisis," MaxPo Discussion Paper Series 20/5, Max Planck Sciences Po Center on Coping with Instability in Market Societies (MaxPo).

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