Identity and Economic Plurality: Rethinking Capitalism and ‘Capitalist Hegemony’

JK Gibson-Graham

In the work of Chantal Mouffe, society is seen as structured by a hegemonic articulation, but one that is only temporarily fixed and always under subversion. Following Mouffe, in this paper I pursue the implications of theorizing ‘the economy’ as a hegemonic formation rather than as a fixed capitalist totality. What might it mean to understand ‘the economic’ as a provisional articulation of capitalist and noncapitalist activities and relations? How might it open up the possibility of anticapitalist and noncapitalist economic interventions? Encouraged by feminist attempts to produce a discourse of sexual difference that is not subsumed to a binary gender hierarchy, I envision a discourse of economic difference that could destabilize and problematize the presumption of capitalist hegemony.

Suggested citation

Gibson-Graham, J. K. 1995. “Identity and Economic Plurality: Rethinking Capitalism and ‘Capitalist Hegemony.’” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 13 (3): 275–82. https://doi.org/10.1068/d130275.