Hegemony tells the story of the drive to create consumer capitalism abroad through political pressure and the promise of goods for mass consumption. In contrast to the recent literature on America as empire, it explains that the primary goal of the foreign and economic policies of the United States is a world which increasingly reflects the American way of doing business, not the formation or management of an empire. Contextualizing both the Iraq war and recent plant closings in the U.S., noted author John Agnew shows how American hegemony has created a world in which power is no longer only shaped territorially. He argues in a sobering conclusion that we are consequently entering a new era of global power, one in which the world the US has made no longer works to its singular advantage.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"An excellent book, Hegemony mounts an effective and scholarly challenge to a great deal of rather simplistic recent work on American empire. Agnew's arguments are convincing, and interesting. Perhaps the most compelling is his attempt to show that hegemony is not simply a national project, as most of the empire genre he criticizes argues, but a global project inextricably implicated with the ways in which capitalist globalization works."-Leslie Sklair, Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science "This innovative, lucid study of 'new geographies of power' can and should be read by a wide audience... Essential."-Choice
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Maße
Höhe: 236 mm
Breite: 163 mm
Dicke: 23 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-59213-152-5 (9781592131525)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
John Agnew is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author or co-author of Place and Politics, The United States in the World Economy, The Geography of the World Economy, Geopolitics, and Place and Politics in Modern Italy, among other titles, as well as the co-editor of American Space/American Place.
PrefaceAcknowledgments1. Introduction2. Hegemony versus Empire3. American Hegemony and the New Geography of Power4. Placing American Hegemony5. U.S. Constitutionalism or Marketplace Society?6. Globalizing American Hegemony7. The New Global Economy8. Globalization Comes Home9. ConclusionNotesIndex