Behind the official story; domination, acting and fantasy; the public transcript as a respectable performance; false-consciousness or laying it on thick; making social space for a dissident subculture; voice under domination - the arts of political disguise; the infrapolitics of subordinate groups; a saturnalia of power - the first public declaration of the hidden transcript.
"Scott argues his thesis uncompromisingly and with relentless
power. From his vantage point it is easy to see through many
standard illusions of social science. . . . Scott's argument is all
the more persuasive for the wealth of cases he brings under his
magnifying-glass and for the vibrancy and liveliness of his style.
One is tempted to say that his own discourse is a revelation of
that transcript normally hidden by the 'official' discourse of
sociology and an example of how rich and fascinating such hidden
transcripts can be by comparison with the rhetoric of
pretence."—Zygmunt Bauman, Times Literary Supplement
"Likely to become a classic work of theory in the social sciences
and history. Its arguments are original, subtle, clear, and
accessible to readers without theoretical inclinations."—John D.
Rogers, The Journal of Asian Studies
"This book offers a penetrating discussion of both the public roles
played by the powerful and powerless and the mocking, vengeful tone
they display offstage—what is termed their public and hidden
transcripts. Using examples from the literature, history, and
politics of cultures around the world, the author examines the many
guises this interaction has taken throughout history and the
tension and contradictions it reflects. This work will revise our
understanding of subordination, resistance, hegemony, folk culture,
and the ideas behind revolt."—International Journal of
Psychology
"Scott elaborates his argument with a dazzling array of
illustrations drawn from centuries of history and all four corners
of the earth. . . . Intellectually convincing and also very
moving—not something one expects to find in an academic
treatise."—Paul Littlewood, Sociology
Received an Honorable Mention for the 1990 Professional/Scholarly
Publishing Division Award in the History, Government, and Political
Science category given by the AAP
"Drawing on a dazzling array of source material, the book is a
wonderful read as well as a provocative discussion of a global
phenomenon of great importance. It seems destined to throw out a
major challenge to the existing literature on power and domination,
and to set in train a new school of research."—Anthony Reid,
Australian National University
"An engaging as well as intellectually provocative book, this will
be a major theoretical contribution to debates about power."—Theda
Skocpol, Harvard University
"A splendid study, surely one of the most important that has
appeared on the whole matter of power and resistance. It is rich in
apt evidence and extremely effective and original."—Natalie Zemon
Davis, Princeton University
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