The Dictionary of Human Geography

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rank as one of the most significant geograph-
ical theories of the twentieth century. It has
been claimed as central by various nationalists
and imperialists, from Nazi Germany to mod-
ern Russia and the United States. gk

Suggested readings
Kearns (1993); Mackinder (1919).

hegemony The capacity to exercise control
by means other than coercive force; namely,
through constructing a willing mass acquies-
cence towards, and participation in, social
projects that are beneficial only to an elite.
Hegemony is the dissemination of the values
and cultural practices of the elite in such a way
that they become unquestioned. Thus, in
everyday life the beliefs and values of the elite
are reinforced, and a hierarchical social order
is reinforced by the everyday actions (see
everyday life) of those who benefit less, if at
all, from its existence.
Contemporary usage of the term is derived
from the writings of Italian Marxist Antonio
Gramsci (Gramsci, 1971 [1929–35]) who,
while imprisoned by the Italianfascistregime
between 1928 and 1935, reflected upon how
the majority of citizens gave support to a re-
pressive social order. The Frankfurt School of
Marxism described how the post-1945 con-
sumerculturewas a form of hegemony, en-
trapping the working class in the pursuit of
material possessions rather than social change.
Cultural geographers have used these Marxist
foundations to explore the role oflandscape
andplacein perpetuating particular hege-
monic ideals (Martin, 2000a: seecultural
geography). Such works have extended the
Marxists’ original concentration uponclass
relations to questions ofraceandpatriarchy.
Particular attention has been paid to the prac-
tice of hegemony in colonial settings, especially
how thelandscapewas used to inculcate ideals
of racial hierarchy (McKinnon, 2005).
The term ‘hegemony’ has been utilized in a
complementary fashion in the analysis of inter-
state politics inpolitical geography, though
with the same roots and general meaning.
A hegemonic power is the single most powerful
statein the inter-state system. Though origin-
ally conceived in terms of materialpower(pro-
ductive capacity and military might), scholars
increasingly looked to the integrative power
of the hegemonic state, or its ability to set a
global agenda that, on the whole, other states
followed. Post-1945, the USA was identified
as the contemporary hegemonic state. Its
material power is complemented by its

dissemination of a ‘primemodernity’ (Taylor,
1999), or the definition of the ultimate modern
way of life. Connecting back to the Frankfurt
School, the US ‘prime modernity’ is the con-
sumer culture epitomized in itssuburbanlife-
style. Hegemony is maintained by other states’
desire to emulate this lifestyle and perceiving
the adoption of particular economic and polit-
ical practices as the means.
Hegemony, in both senses, is aprocess.
Hence, discussion has arisen of the way he-
gemony is resisted. In the first meaning of the
term, working-class and subaltern groups
have adopted cultural practices that run coun-
ter to hegemonic demands. In the second
meaning, discussion of the decline of
US power, the challenge of other states and
terroristgroups, and the meaning of ‘em-
pire’ question whether hegemonic rule is
being replaced by more coercive practices. A
counter-argument is found in the notion of
‘imperial overstretch’ in which hegemonic
states are eventually bankrupted by their over-
seas commitments and lose their primacy
(Kennedy, 1988). cf

Suggested reading
Agnew (2005a); Lears (1985).

heritage Although ‘heritage’ includes and
derives from a highly individualized notion of
personal inheritance or bequest (e.g. through
family wills and legacies),human geography
is concerned with collective notions of heritage
that link a group to a shared inheritance.
In this context, heritage usually denotes two
related sets of meanings. On the one hand,
it refers to iconiccultural landscapesor,
usually and more specifically, to tourism
sites with an historical theme that have often
been protected or preserved in some way for
the nation-state and become part of the ‘heri-
tage industry’; for example, a museum or an
archaeological site (Urry, 2002 [1990]). On
the other hand, heritage refers to a suite of
shared culturalvaluesandmemoriesinher-
ited over time and expressed through a variety
of culturalperformances– for example, song
or parade (Peckham, 2003). The basis of this
group identification varies across time and
space and can hinge on allegiance derived
from, for instance, a communal religious trad-
ition, a class formation, geographical propin-
quity, and a national or imperial identity
(Moore and Whelan, 2007).
Traditionally, historians and geographers
have viewed heritage sites as spaces for inscrib-
ing nationalist narratives of the past on to the

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HERITAGE
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