This paper reinterprets the concept of hegemony by relocating its source from culture to institutional structure. In critical and neo-Marxist traditions, hegemony is typically understood as a form of cultural domination in which ruling groups secure consent through ideology, discourse, and the normalization of social relations. While this perspective captures how power is experienced, it risks misidentifying the level at which power originates. Drawing on the framework of Constitutional Civic Realism (CCR), the paper argues that hegemony is not a self-generating cultural phenomenon but the downstream effect of institutional imbalance among organized powers. When economic, political, and informational institutions become concentrated and insufficiently constrained, they acquire the capacity to produce and stabilize dominant narratives across multiple domains of social life. These narratives then appear as cultural hegemony, masking their structural origins. The paper develops this argument in several stages. First, it acknowledges the insights of critical theory in showing how power operates through meaning, discourse, and internalization. It then identifies a structural blind spot: the tendency to treat ideology as the source rather than the expression of power. Reframing hegemony as institutional alignment, the paper shows how coordinated control across domains enables the large-scale reproduction of dominant narratives. It further explains the persistence of ideology through the interaction of institutional reinforcement and psychological attachment, drawing on Becker’s account of symbolic systems, while maintaining that structure remains primary. The paper also examines the limits of cultural resistance. While critique and counter-discourse can expose domination, they rarely alter the distribution of power in the absence of institutional change. As long as dominant actors retain control over key institutions, alternative ideas struggle to gain durable traction. This explains the recurring pattern in which ideological challenge produces limited structural transformation. To address this limitation, the paper introduces Organized Civic Power (OCP) as the structural counter to hegemony. OCP consists of durable civic institutions capable of monitoring, contesting, and constraining concentrated power across domains. By restoring institutional balance, OCP reduces the capacity of any single group to monopolize the production of meaning, making ideological dominance more contingent and open to challenge. This paper is part of a five-paper series on Constitutional Civic Realism (CCR), each examining a different domain of political theory to show how democratic failure arises from imbalances among organized powers.
John C. Matylonek (Sat,) studied this question.