15 Highly Influenced Papers.
Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter. The museum is the cultural product of western history, and its concept was not domesticated by Asia until the twentieth century. OCLC 269432294. Cultural hegemony refers to domination or rule maintained through ideological or cultural means. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
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If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian. Hegemony is not totalitarian. Users without a subscription are not able to see the full content. This chapter examines legislative practice at the end of the Republic to determine what was normal within this system. Passage of a law is the point at which debate becomes practice, and if the “steeply hierarchical communication-situation” of the preceding contiones did not determine the result, then either the contio was not really so important in the legislative process or audiences had greater powers of resistance to the “dominant ideology” than often assumed. Scholars continue to pore over his political journalism and his prison notebooks, reassembling the fragments in hopes of theoretical illumination. Some features of the site may not work correctly. Towards a Critique of Cultural Hegemony and Resistance: A Reading of Soyinka's The Lion and The Jewel • Beech, Dave; Andy Hewitt; Mel Jordan (2007). DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199641895.003.0003, Part II Strategy and Tactics in Public Speech, 1 Friends, Romans, Countrymen: Addressing the Roman People and the Rhetoric of Inclusion, 2 ‘Cultural Hegemony’ and the Communicative Power of the Roman Elite, 3 Feeding the Plebs with Words: The Significance of Senatorial Public Oratory in the Small World of Roman Politics, 4 From Meeting to Text: The Contio in the Late Republic, 5 Beyond the Contio: Political Communication in the Tribunate of Tiberius Gracchus, 6 Speech, Competition, and Collaboration: Tribunician Politics and the Development of Popular Ideology, 7 Publius Clodius and the Boundaries of the Contio, 9 Pompeius, Helvius Mancia, and the Politics of Public Debate, 10 The Bad Orator: Between Clumsy Delivery and Political Danger, 11 The Orator and His Audience: The Rhetorical Perspective in the Art of Deliberation, 12 Cicero and the Politics of Ambiguity: Interpreting the Pro Marcello, 13 The Roman Ambassador’s Speech: Public Oratory on the Diplomatic Stage, 15 Provincials, patrons, and the rhetoric of repetundae, 16 The Common (Mediocris) Orator of the Late Republic: The Scribonii Curiones, 17 Fragmentary Speeches: The Oratory and Political Career of Piso Caesoninus, 18 Marcus Junius Brutus the Orator: Between Philosophy and Rhetoric, 19 Antonius, Triumvir and Orator: Career, Style, and Effectiveness, Community and Communication: Oratory and Politics in Republican Rome, 1 Friends, Romans, Countrymen: Addressing the Roman People and the Rhetoric of Inclusion, 2 ‘Cultural Hegemony’ and the Communicative Power of the Roman Elite, 6 Speech, Competition, and Collaboration: Tribunician Politics and the Development of Popular Ideology, 7 Publius Clodius and the Boundaries of the, 9 Pompeius, Helvius Mancia, and the Politics of Public Debate, 10 The Bad Orator: Between Clumsy Delivery and Political Danger, 11 The Orator and His Audience: The Rhetorical Perspective in the Art of Deliberation, 12 Cicero and the Politics of Ambiguity: Interpreting the, 13 The Roman Ambassador’s Speech: Public Oratory on the Diplomatic Stage, 14 Foreign Eloquence in the Roman Senate, 15 Provincials, patrons, and the rhetoric of, 17 Fragmentary Speeches: The Oratory and Political Career of Piso Caesoninus, 18 Marcus Junius Brutus the Orator: Between Philosophy and Rhetoric, 19 Antonius, Triumvir and Orator: Career, Style, and Effectiveness, Ancient Greek, Roman, and Early Christian Philosophy.
Users without a subscription are not able to see the full content. Some features of the site may not work correctly. : A View from the Trenches, Whose voices? DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199641895.003.0003, Part II Strategy and Tactics in Public Speech, 1 Friends, Romans, Countrymen: Addressing the Roman People and the Rhetoric of Inclusion, 2 ‘Cultural Hegemony’ and the Communicative Power of the Roman Elite, 3 Feeding the Plebs with Words: The Significance of Senatorial Public Oratory in the Small World of Roman Politics, 4 From Meeting to Text: The Contio in the Late Republic, 5 Beyond the Contio: Political Communication in the Tribunate of Tiberius Gracchus, 6 Speech, Competition, and Collaboration: Tribunician Politics and the Development of Popular Ideology, 7 Publius Clodius and the Boundaries of the Contio, 9 Pompeius, Helvius Mancia, and the Politics of Public Debate, 10 The Bad Orator: Between Clumsy Delivery and Political Danger, 11 The Orator and His Audience: The Rhetorical Perspective in the Art of Deliberation, 12 Cicero and the Politics of Ambiguity: Interpreting the Pro Marcello, 13 The Roman Ambassador’s Speech: Public Oratory on the Diplomatic Stage, 15 Provincials, patrons, and the rhetoric of repetundae, 16 The Common (Mediocris) Orator of the Late Republic: The Scribonii Curiones, 17 Fragmentary Speeches: The Oratory and Political Career of Piso Caesoninus, 18 Marcus Junius Brutus the Orator: Between Philosophy and Rhetoric, 19 Antonius, Triumvir and Orator: Career, Style, and Effectiveness, Community and Communication: Oratory and Politics in Republican Rome, 1 Friends, Romans, Countrymen: Addressing the Roman People and the Rhetoric of Inclusion, 2 ‘Cultural Hegemony’ and the Communicative Power of the Roman Elite, 6 Speech, Competition, and Collaboration: Tribunician Politics and the Development of Popular Ideology, 7 Publius Clodius and the Boundaries of the, 9 Pompeius, Helvius Mancia, and the Politics of Public Debate, 10 The Bad Orator: Between Clumsy Delivery and Political Danger, 11 The Orator and His Audience: The Rhetorical Perspective in the Art of Deliberation, 12 Cicero and the Politics of Ambiguity: Interpreting the, 13 The Roman Ambassador’s Speech: Public Oratory on the Diplomatic Stage, 14 Foreign Eloquence in the Roman Senate, 15 Provincials, patrons, and the rhetoric of, 17 Fragmentary Speeches: The Oratory and Political Career of Piso Caesoninus, 18 Marcus Junius Brutus the Orator: Between Philosophy and Rhetoric, 19 Antonius, Triumvir and Orator: Career, Style, and Effectiveness, Ancient Greek, Roman, and Early Christian Philosophy. Regarding the National Taiwan Museum founded in 1908 or the Nan-Tong Museum in China founded in 1905, these pioneer museums in Asia were established under the atmosphere of pursuing western civilization. You are currently offline.
Keywords: Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2013, DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199641895.001.0001, PRINTED FROM OXFORD SCHOLARSHIP ONLINE (oxford.universitypressscholarship.com). An individual user may print out a PDF of a single chapter of a monograph in OSO for personal use.