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‘intellectual and moral leadership (75)’. Hegemony involves a specific kind of consensus:
a social group seeks to present its own particular interests as the general interests of the
society as a whole. In this sense, the concept is used to suggest a society in which,
despite oppression and exploitation, there is a high degree of consensus, a large
measure of social stability; a society in which subordinate groups and classes appear to
actively support and subscribe to values, ideals, objectives, cultural and political mean-
ings, which bind them to, and ‘incorporate’ them into, the prevailing structures of
power. For example, throughout most of the course of the twentieth century, general
elections in Britain were contested by what are now the two main political parties,
Labour and Conservative. On each occasion the contest circled around the question,
who best can administer capitalism (usually referred to by the less politically charged
term ‘the economy’) – less public ownership, more public ownership, less taxation,
more taxation, etc. And on each occasion, the mainstream media concurred. In this
sense, the parameters of the election debate are ultimately dictated by the particular
needs and interests of capitalism, presented as the interests and needs of society as a
whole. This is clearly an example of a situation in which the interests of one powerful
section of society have been ‘universalized’ as the interests of the society as a whole.
The situation seems perfectly ‘natural’, virtually beyond serious contention. But it was
not always like this. Capitalism’s hegemony is the result of profound political, social,
cultural and economic changes that have taken place over a period of at least 300 years.
Until as late as the second part of the nineteenth century, capitalism’s position was still
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uncertain. It is only in the twenty-first century that the system seems to have won, or
at least to be winning, especially with the political and economic collapse of the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europe, and the introduction of the ‘Open Door’ policy and ‘mar-
ket socialism’ in China. Capitalism is now, more or less, internationally hegemonic.
Although hegemony implies a society with a high degree of consensus, it should not
be understood to refer to a society in which all conflict has been removed. What the
concept is meant to suggest is a society in which conflict is contained and channelled
into ideologically safe harbours. That is, hegemony is maintained (and must be con-
tinually maintained: it is an ongoing process) by dominant groups and classes ‘negoti-
ating’ with, and making concessions to, subordinate groups and classes. For example,
consider the historical case of British hegemony in the Caribbean. One of the ways in
which Britain attempted to secure its control over the indigenous population, and the
African men, women and children it had transported there as slaves, was by means
of the imposition of a version of British culture (a standard practice for colonial
regimes everywhere): part of the process was to institute English as the official lan-
guage. In linguistic terms, the result was not the imposition of English, but for the
majority of the population, the creation of a new language. The dominant element of
this new language is English, but the language itself is not simply English. What
emerged was a transformed English, with new stresses and new rhythms, with some
words dropped and new words introduced (from African languages and elsewhere).
The new language is the result of a ‘negotiation’ between dominant and subordinate
cultures, a language marked by both ‘resistance’ and ‘incorporation’: that is, not a lan-
guage imposed from above, nor a language which spontaneously had arisen from