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NATIONAL–POPULAR (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   144273


Legacy of subalternity and Gramsci’s national–popular: populist discourse in the case of the Islamic Republic of Iran / Holliday, Shabnam J   Article
Holliday, Shabnam J Article
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Summary/Abstract Drawing on Laclau’s concept of populist discourse and Gramsci’s ‘national–popular collective will’, and using the case of Iran, this article puts forward the idea of the legacy of subalternity in the context of post-revolution governments. The concept of ‘national–popular collective will’ facilitates an understanding of how the popular subject is constructed and the meanings embedded in that process. It is argued that Islamic Republic elites articulate a populist discourse that constructs the ‘self’ (the Islamic Republic) as synonymous with ‘the people’. Embedded in this discursive construction is a legacy of subalternity that goes back to the 1979 Revolution’s populist discourse.
Key Words Iran  Populism  Subaltern  Rouhani  Gramsc  National–Popular 
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2
ID:   166010


Rapprochement amid mounting security concerns: the 1998–2007 inter–Korean reconciliation as hegemonic projects / Choi, Yong Sub   Journal Article
Choi, Yong Sub Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The 1998–2007 inter–Korean reconciliation was paradoxical because there were aggravating military tensions during the same period. To solve the security puzzle, this paper employs a Gramscian approach and argues that the reconciliation was pursued as hegemonic projects by the ruling political groups in North and South Korea. In South Korea, the economic crisis in 1997 led counter-hegemonic liberal nationalists to take political power, and the new ruling political group implemented the engagement policy toward Pyongyang to attain hegemony. In North Korea, the existing ruling political group sought to reconcile with Seoul, mostly for material gains to maintain hegemony by stopping the ongoing economic crisis from developing into a political crisis without a full–scale reform of the system. In the process, each capitalized on unication nationalism, which had a strong national– popular force because of the division of Korea. The rapprochement was carried out primarily to exhibit their contributions to unication, which could be signicantly conducive to their winning the domestic struggle for hegemony.
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