|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Michael TeslerPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 1.60cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 2.30cm Weight: 0.425kg ISBN: 9780226353012ISBN 10: 022635301 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 04 April 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsTesler s subject is racialization: the process whereby racial considerations are brought more heavily to bear on political evaluations. His claim is that Obama s omnipresence as president and his embodiment of blackness has produced widespread racialization in the white public. The strength of the project and it is a considerable strength is Tesler s brilliant marshaling of evidence in support of his claim: from repeated cross-sectional surveys carried out with identical instrumentation on comparable national samples, before and during Obama s presidency; from several National Science Foundation-funded studies that reinterview respondents who had participated in previous national surveys prior to Obama s rise to national prominence; and from a series of artfully designed experiments. Decades ago, Myrdal argued that a fundamental test of the American experiment with democracy was how well we would deal with race. He was right. Tesler has shown how far we have yet to go. --Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan Tesler makes a powerful argument that race has affected even seemingly non-racial parts of American society. -- Salon (4/28/2016 12:00:00 AM) The main course of the book is an attempt to demonstrate, with scientific validity, the influence of these racial attitudes during the Obama years. This happens to be an exceedingly complicated business, because people are highly sensitive to questions about their attitudes on race, and are thus highly adept at avoiding answers that might show them as racist. . . . Tesler's book painstakingly shows how comprehensive these problems were when dealing with the nation's first black president -- Congress & the Presidency Tesler's subject is racialization: the process whereby racial considerations are brought more heavily to bear on political evaluations. His claim is that Obama's omnipresence as president and his embodiment of blackness has produced widespread racialization in the white public. The strength of the project--and it is a considerable strength--is Tesler's brilliant marshaling of evidence in support of his claim: from repeated cross-sectional surveys carried out with identical instrumentation on comparable national samples, before and during Obama's presidency; from several National Science Foundation-funded studies that reinterview respondents who had participated in previous national surveys prior to Obama's rise to national prominence; and from a series of artfully designed experiments. Decades ago, Myrdal argued that a fundamental test of the American experiment with democracy was how well we would deal with race. He was right. Tesler has shown how far we have yet to go. --Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan Michael Tesler's Post-Racial or Most-Racial: Race and Politics in the Obama Era deals with whether voting during the Barack Obama era 2008-16 was more or less racially motivated than in the past (he influenced polls before he was elected president). Just as it was said that the end of the Cold War signalled the end of history, so it was sometimes said that the election of Barack Obama signalled a post-racial USA--free from racial preference, discrimination and prejudice. Based on numerous survey and interview-based public opinion panels, Tesler argues (successfully in my opinion) that politics became, instead, more racial during this time, with whites and racial conservatives moving and sorting even more toward the Republican Party and non-whites moving and sorting more toward the Democratic Party. --Eleanor D. Glor The Innovation Journal: The Public Sector Innovation Journal One of the most important books on racial politics to appear in the United States, Post-Racial or Most-Racial? presents cutting-edge analysis of racial attitudes and their effects on modern American politics. Tesler superbly sets out the extent to which heightened partisan and ideological polarization characterizing American politics in the last two decades is a deeply racialized division and argues persuasively that mass politics became more heavily influenced by racial considerations during Obama's presidency. Statistically rigorous, theoretically nuanced, and politically important, this is a major work of original scholarship. --Desmond King, University of Oxford ""Tesler makes a powerful argument that race has affected even seemingly non-racial parts of American society.""-- ""Salon"" (4/28/2016 12:00:00 AM) ""The main course of the book is an attempt to demonstrate, with scientific validity, the influence of these racial attitudes during the Obama years. This happens to be an exceedingly complicated business, because people are highly sensitive to questions about their attitudes on race, and are thus highly adept at avoiding answers that might show them as racist. . . . Tesler's book painstakingly shows how comprehensive these problems were when dealing with the nation's first black president""-- ""Congress & the Presidency"" ""Tesler's subject is racialization: the process whereby racial considerations are brought more heavily to bear on political evaluations. His claim is that Obama's omnipresence as president and his embodiment of blackness has produced widespread racialization in the white public. The strength of the project--and it is a considerable strength--is Tesler's brilliant marshaling of evidence in support of his claim: from repeated cross-sectional surveys carried out with identical instrumentation on comparable national samples, before and during Obama's presidency; from several National Science Foundation-funded studies that reinterview respondents who had participated in previous national surveys prior to Obama's rise to national prominence; and from a series of artfully designed experiments. Decades ago, Myrdal argued that a fundamental test of the American experiment with democracy was how well we would deal with race. He was right. Tesler has shown how far we have yet to go.""--Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan ""Michael Tesler's Post-Racial or Most-Racial: Race and Politics in the Obama Era deals with whether voting during the Barack Obama era 2008-16 was more or less racially motivated than in the past (he influenced polls before he was elected president). Just as it was said that the end of the Cold War signalled the end of history, so it was sometimes said that the election of Barack Obama signalled a post-racial USA--free from racial preference, discrimination and prejudice. Based on numerous survey and interview-based public opinion panels, Tesler argues (successfully in my opinion) that politics became, instead, more racial during this time, with whites and racial conservatives moving and sorting even more toward the Republican Party and non-whites moving and sorting more toward the Democratic Party.""--Eleanor D. Glor ""The Innovation Journal: The Public Sector Innovation Journal"" ""One of the most important books on racial politics to appear in the United States, Post-Racial or Most-Racial? presents cutting-edge analysis of racial attitudes and their effects on modern American politics. Tesler superbly sets out the extent to which heightened partisan and ideological polarization characterizing American politics in the last two decades is a deeply racialized division and argues persuasively that mass politics became more heavily influenced by racial considerations during Obama's presidency. Statistically rigorous, theoretically nuanced, and politically important, this is a major work of original scholarship.""--Desmond King, University of Oxford One of the most important books on racial politics to appear in the United States, <i>Post-Racial or Most-Racial? </i>presents cutting-edge analysis of racial attitudes and their effects on modern American politics. Tesler superbly sets out the extent to which heightened partisan and ideological polarization characterizing American politics in the last two decades is a deeply racialized division and argues persuasively that mass politics became more heavily influenced by racial considerations during Obama s presidency. Statistically rigorous, theoretically nuanced, and politically important, this is a major work of original scholarship. --Desmond King, University of Oxford Tesler's subject is racialization: the process whereby racial considerations are brought more heavily to bear on political evaluations. His claim is that Obama's omnipresence as president and his embodiment of blackness has produced widespread racialization in the white public. The strength of the project--and it is a considerable strength--is Tesler's brilliant marshaling of evidence in support of his claim: from repeated cross-sectional surveys carried out with identical instrumentation on comparable national samples, before and during Obama's presidency; from several National Science Foundation-funded studies that reinterview respondents who had participated in previous national surveys prior to Obama's rise to national prominence; and from a series of artfully designed experiments. Decades ago, Myrdal argued that a fundamental test of the American experiment with democracy was how well we would deal with race. He was right. Tesler has shown how far we have yet to go. --Donald R. Kinder, University of Michigan Author InformationMichael Tesler is assistant professor at the University of California, Irvine, and the author of Obama's Race, also published by the University of Chicago Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |