2011
DOI: 10.1080/00472336.2011.530035
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Cracking Hegemony in Thailand: Gramsci, Bourdieu and the Dialectics of Rebellion

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Cited by 34 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Due to the intricate power mechanism of coercion and hegemony, the working class's consciousness and rebellions against capitalism do not appear as automatically as vulgar Marxism in Gramsci's time predicted. 2 Many subsequent scholars have delved into Gramsci's insights on hegemony and some have analysed the Asian countries with his theories (Sim 2006;Landau 2008;Glassman 2011). From these works, this article defines hegemony as involving six key elements.…”
Section: The Gramscian Approach To the Chinese Statementioning
confidence: 97%
“…Due to the intricate power mechanism of coercion and hegemony, the working class's consciousness and rebellions against capitalism do not appear as automatically as vulgar Marxism in Gramsci's time predicted. 2 Many subsequent scholars have delved into Gramsci's insights on hegemony and some have analysed the Asian countries with his theories (Sim 2006;Landau 2008;Glassman 2011). From these works, this article defines hegemony as involving six key elements.…”
Section: The Gramscian Approach To the Chinese Statementioning
confidence: 97%
“…The graffiti indicate that the king is no longer a legitimate leadership figure in the eyes of many of those whose aspirations have not been served by decades of royally sanctioned but highly uneven capitalist development (see Glassman 2011). The king's appeal is no Working Towards the Monarchy 395 longer universal, if it ever was.…”
Section: T(h)aksin Returnsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Protracted political crisis featured Thai politics since then. An inter-elite struggle between royalist groups and pro-Thaksin groups was accompanied by, and intertwined with, social confrontations sided with respective camps, which greatly 390 The Pacific Review destabilized and polarized Thai politics and society (Glassman 2011). The turmoil in political development inevitably spilled over into cyberspace.…”
Section: The Pacific Reviewmentioning
confidence: 97%