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Crises and Hegemonic Transitions

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Tracing the vicissitudes of US hegemony from the interwar period to the present, Fusaro provides a novel Gramscian way to interpret past and present developments within the world economy.
  • 25 February 2020
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Crises and Hegemonic Transitions reworks the concept of hegemony at the international level and analyses its relation to world market crises. Returning to the critical edition of Gramsci's Quaderni and maintaining that the author's work is permeated by Marx's Capital and the law of value, Fusaro argues that imperialist states strive to construct hegemonic relations through the use of domination, leadership, coercion, and consensus, in order to secure capital accumulation, and that economic crises have only the potential to provoke crises of hegemony. Tracing the vicissitudes of US hegemony from the interwar period to the present and assessing the Great Depression's and the Great Recession's impact, Fusaro provides a novel way to interpret past and present developments within the world economy.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Imprint: Haymarket Books
Series: Historical Materialism
Publication Date: 25 February 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781642590418
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism, Political ideologies and movements, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Imperialism, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economic History, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Theory, Colonialism and imperialism, Politics and government, Economic history, Economic theory and philosophy
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Lorenzo Fusaro, Ph.D. in International Political Economy (King's College London, 2013), is Associate Professor of Political Economy at the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico. He is the author of diverse works, including Revisiting Gramsci's Laboratory (Brill, forthcoming, with Antonini et al.) and 'Why China is Different: Hegemony, Revolutions and the Rise of Contender States' (in Research in Political Economy 32, August 2017).

Acknowledgements

Figures and Tables

Introduction: Which Gramsci?

1 Gramsci vs Capital?

2 Towards the Development of a New Concept

3 Argument and Plan of the Book

1 A Dissenting View

1 Theories of Hegemony

2 Crises and Hegemonic Transitions

3 Do Crises lead to Hegemonic Transitions?

4 A Critique

Part 1 Theory

2 Hegemony

1 Readings of Gramsci

2 Hegemony at the National Level

3 Gramscian IR

4 Gramsci's IR

5 Hegemony at the International Level (first cut)

3 Crises

1 Marx's Method and Gramsci

2 Capital

3 An Integral Theory of Crises

4 From Capital to the International

5 Hegemony at the International Level (second cut)

6 World Market Crises and Hegemonic Transitions

Part 2 History

4 Tantae Molis Erat: US Hegemony during the Interwar Period

1 Sturm und Drang Hegemony

2 In Crisis

3 The Full Realisation of US Hegemony

5 Not for Real, Yet: US Hegemony Today

1 Hegemony Unravelling (1970-2007)?

2 The Great Recession

3 Fight with Cudgels

Conclusion: Crises and Hegemonic Transitions

1 The Concept

2 Hegemony

3 Crises and Hegemonic Transitions

4 US Hegemony and China's Long March Ahead

Bibliography Index