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Though generally associated with the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci, the idea of hegemony had a crucial history in revolutionary Russia where it was used to conceptualise the dynamics of political and cultural leadership. Drawing on extensive archival research, The Dimensions of Hegemony: Language, Culture and Politics in Revolutionary Russia considers the cultural dimensions of hegemony, with particular focus on the role of language in political debates and in scholarship of the period.
Craig Brandist is Professor of Cultural Theory and Intellectual History at the University of Sheffield, UK. His work has greatly extended Anglophone understandings of Soviet sociolinguistics, and includes major works on Bahktin, Vygotskii, and the Soviet critique of Eurocentrism
PrefaceAcknowledgementsIntroduction: the Multiple Dimensions of Hegemony1. Hegemony in Russian Social Democracy Before 19172. Hegemony without Social Science: Traditional Intellectuals in Late-Imperial Russia.3. Verbal Art and Revolution: the Living Word4. Metamorphoses of Hegemony in the Period of the NEP5. The New Paradigm in Linguistic Science6. The Revolution in the West and East: Hegemony and the National Question7. Hegemony: the Decline and Fall of a Paradigm8. Ideology Critique, Positivism and Marxism: the Paradoxical Legacy of Nikolai Marr9. ConclusionGlossary of NamesReferences