In acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which is that of all the social elements which share the same mode of thinking and acting. Film, Politics, and Gramsci - Page 78by Marcia Landy - 1994 - 280 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| 1991 - 262 pages
...collectivity nor from notions of resistance. He states that, ... in acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...all conformists of some conformism or other, always man -in-thc -mass or collective man. The question is this: of what historical type is the conformism,... | |
| Jonathan Dollimore - 1991 - 402 pages
...Marxism and post/ modernism, know thy discursive formations: hi acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...which share the same mode of thinking and acting. . . . The starting-point of critical elaboration is the consciousness of what one really is, and is... | |
| Martin Barker, Anne Beezer - 1992 - 220 pages
...also-frequently-quoted Notes which precede it: Note /: In acquiring one's conception of the world, one always belongs to a particular grouping which...elements which share the same mode of thinking and acting .... When one's conception of the world is not critical and coherent but disjointed and episodic, one... | |
| Peter Louis Galison, David J. Stump - 1996 - 584 pages
...processes. SIMON SCHAFFER Contextualizing the Canon *$* In acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...We are all conformists of some conformism or other. . . . The question is this: Of what historical type is the conformism? —Antonio dramsci Mario Biagioli's... | |
| J. Cheryl Exum, Stephen D. Moore - 1998 - 518 pages
...'legitimacy' of readings by ordinary readers. Gramsci writes, 'In acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...acting. We are all conformists of some conformism or other...'2* Likewise, Segovia and Patte emphasize that one's social location and cultural attachments... | |
| Anna Marie Smith - 1998 - 256 pages
...every individual expresses her identity as a social being. "In acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...which share the same mode of thinking and acting" (Gramsci 1971: 324). Although Gramsci is sharply critical of what he calls "irrational superstitions"... | |
| James H. Mittelman - 2000 - 303 pages
...relationship to and position in a variety of social groups: In acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...We are all conformists of some conformism or other. . . . When one's conception of the world is not critical and coherent but disjointed and episodic,... | |
| Diarmuid Ó Giolláin - 2000 - 246 pages
...automatically involved in a social group or groups, and that 'in acquiring one's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which...which share the same mode of thinking and acting'. This grouping may consist only of dispersed and isolated individuals or a concrete social group: one's... | |
| Alan Sinfield - 1992 - 382 pages
...orientation; but from involvement in a milieu, a subculture. "In acquiring one's conception of the world one belongs to a particular grouping which is that of...which share the same mode of thinking and acting," Gramsci observes.18 It is through such sharing that one may learn to inhabit plausible oppositional... | |
| Kate Crehan - 2002 - 236 pages
...two sentences here give us another definition of culture: cultures are particular groupings made up of 'all the social elements which share the same mode of thinking and acting' and we all belong to some form of such a grouping, 'We are all conformists of some conformism or other'.... | |
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