Introduction
Chapter 1: Partisanship and Ideology in Political
Decision-Making
Chapter 2: Elite Cues, Negative Partisanship, and the Changing
Media Landscape
Chapter 3: Partisanship, Policy, Compromise, and the
Non-political
Chapter 4: Partisanship, Race, and Intergroup Contact
Chapter 5: Prospect Theory and Partisan Cues
Chapter 6: Political Responsiveness to the Lived Experience
Chapter 7: Independents, Knowledge, and Alienation
Chapter 8: An Elite Problem Calls for an Elite Solution
Appendix
Joshua J. Dyck is Professor and Chair of the Political Science
Department and Director of the Center for Public Opinion at the
University of Massachusetts Lowell. He is co-author of Initiatives
without Engagement.
Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz is Saul I. Stern Professor of Civic
Engagement and Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs in the School of
Public Policy at the University of Maryland.
Dyck and Pearson-Merkowitz conduct a wide-ranging investigation
into the effects of partisanship. Drawing on surveys and an array
of other data, they show that partisanship and partisan cues shape
attitudes, behaviors, and preferences across a huge range of
domains, extending well beyond the political realm. This creative
and thought-provoking study illuminates the drivers of growing
affective polarization in society, as well as the challenges facing
American democracy ahead.
*Frances E. Lee, Professor of Politics and Public Affairs,
Princeton University*
This book convincingly demonstrates how partisanship distorts our
view of the world. Through a series of well-designed experiments,
Dyck and Pearson-Merkowitz show how our responses to partisan
signals affects everything from the politicians and policies we
support to the foods we like. They also reveal how independent
voters may be both more savvy than often portrayed and better able
than partisans to realistically assess the world. This book is
vital for those seeking to understand partisanship and its role in
our political system.
*Seth Masket, Professor of Political Science and Director of the
Center on American Politics, University of Denver*
In this groundbreaking book, Dyck and Pearson-Merkowitz go beyond
the well-tread domain of how partisanship affects politics to
document how deep the influence of affective attachments to parties
has become. The pair make two key contributions. First, they
document that partisanship has become so toxic that the
ameliorative power of positive intergroup contact—long thought to
reduce intergroup animosity—has little impact on how we view
out-partisans. Second, they question the value of measures of
political knowledge. As what we know about politics has become
endogenous to partisanship, the political science canon about how
political knowledge affects political preferences becomes upended
and in need of revision. A must-read for students of American
politics today.
*Alexandra Filindra, Associate Professor of Political Science and
Psychology, University of Illinois Chicago*
This is an important cautionary tale, well supported by the
authors' evidence... Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates
through faculty; professionals.
*Choice*
This is an important cautionary tale, well supported by the
authors' evidence.
*Choice*
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