The Operation of Hegemony in Scott Westerfeld's Uglies
Abstract
Uglies is a dystopian fiction written by Scott Westerfeld, first published in 2005. This novel presents a 
world in which the government indoctrinates people into believing they are ugly unless they get plastic 
surgery. The novel illustrates how power and ruling class position could be reached by conducting a 
process of negotiation rather than using coercive action. In Uglies, the special circumstances as the 
dominant class tries to obtain authority to manage the society with the help of ideological state 
apparatuses and repressive state apparatuses. This study uses Antonio Gramsci's theory of hegemony and 
is supported by Louis Althusser's concept of apparatuses. This study aims to illustrate the five stages of 
hegemony operation in a dystopian society and finally connect them to the real condition of the United 
States as the setting place of the novel. The result of this study portrays that Uglies establishes the 
hegemony operation from how the Special Circumstances as the government indoctrinates its ideology of 
beauty doctrines to validate the existence of beauty standards in the society. The novel's illustration of 
hegemonic power is closely connected to the hegemonic power of liberalism ideology in the United 
States. When almost half of the population underwent surgical and minimally invasive cosmetic 
procedures to augment a certain body feature. Hence, as a literary product, Westerfeld criticizes the 
construction of beauty standards that contradict each other to finally gain the phase of having authority 
to take control the society.