Race and Hegemonic Struggle in the United States

Pop Culture, Politics, and Protest

Contributions by Evan Beaumont Center, Kristen Hoerl, Linda Horwitz, Casey Ryan Kelly University of Nebraska -, Brittany Lewis, Catherine H. Palczewski, David W. Seitz, Anna M. Young Edited by Michael G. Lacy, Mary E. Triece

Publication date:

20 August 2014

Length of book:

242 pages

Publisher

Fairleigh Dickinson University Press

Dimensions:

233x168mm
7x9"

ISBN-13: 9781611477092

Race and Hegemonic Struggle in the United States: Pop Culture, Politics, and Protest is a collection of essays that draws on concepts developed by Antonio Gramsci to examine the imagining of race in popular culture productions, political discourses, and resistance rhetoric. The chapters in this volume call for renewed attention to Gramscian political thought to examine, understand, interpret and explain the persistent contradictions, ambivalence, and paradoxes in racial representations and material realities.This book’s contributors rely on Gramsci’s ideas to explore how popular, political, and resistant discourses reproduce or transform our understandings of race and racism, social inequalities, and power relationships in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Together the chapters confront forms of collective and cultural amnesia about race and racism suggested in the phrases “postrace,” “postracial,” and “postracism," while exposing the historical, institutional, social, and political forces and constraints that make antiracism, atonement, and egalitarian change so difficult to achieve.