@DaSkrubKing weirdly its at least partially gender stereotypes, Rs are viewed as more masculine and so are considered better on policy areas that are also considered more masculine. https://t.co/t7v3HVAZ2h https://t.co/Wka1011Cgx
RT @TylerDinucci: But it also speaks of how the parties have been gendered, which is bad for our overall political climate. Right-wing poli…
RT @NathanKalmoe: Another good one is an article on gendered party images by Nick Winter. https://t.co/X2nexklQQ3
Another good one is an article on gendered party images by Nick Winter. https://t.co/X2nexklQQ3
RT @cmMcConnaughy: "Masculine republicans and feminine democrats: Gender and Americans’ explicit and implicit images of the political parti…
"Masculine republicans and feminine democrats: Gender and Americans’ explicit and implicit images of the political parties." by Nick Winter (Political Behavior 2010). https://t.co/NOLbT2ij58
RT @eminently_me5: 👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾 My little hypothesis has already been developed! Americans treat Republicans like we treat men and Democrats l…
RT @eminently_me5: 👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾 My little hypothesis has already been developed! Americans treat Republicans like we treat men and Democrats l…
RT @eminently_me5: 👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾 My little hypothesis has already been developed! Americans treat Republicans like we treat men and Democrats l…
RT @eminently_me5: 👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾 My little hypothesis has already been developed! Americans treat Republicans like we treat men and Democrats l…
RT @jinriora: @eminently_me5 there's also this article, which is pretty much the argument! plus there's tons of work on gendered language i…
@eminently_me5 there's also this article, which is pretty much the argument! plus there's tons of work on gendered language in politics more generally (which typically focus on individual politicians) https://t.co/RDJdHlf6IO
@e_tolley Oh yes. Ok. Also useful might be Nick Winter’s 2010 article which also looks at open ended descriptions so I’m guessing he ran into this issue? https://t.co/THQyDX1WbJ
@IonaItalia @ZachG932 @cognitivicta There's also this evidence, which I posted the other day: https://t.co/08yw9vdR5H
RT @NoahCarl90: Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats…
One possibility is that after the war, technocracy - with its ideal of the bespectacled scientific leader, calm and rational, made deep inroads into the American psyche, and the education gap turned into deeply different preferences for leadership.
@mnitabach I feel sorry for him. Also is he saying Repubs are gay? https://t.co/TPuXIhDIRM
RT @NoahCarl90: Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats…
RT @NoahCarl90: Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats…
RT @NoahCarl90: Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats…
RT @NoahCarl90: Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats…
RT @NoahCarl90: Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats…
More masculine than the Democratic Party? This is a very low hurdle to clear.
Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats, and that the Republican Party is seen as more masculine than the Democratic Party: • https://t.co/z6eFIWJJRh • https://t.co/svwU6
Incidentally, here is some contemporary evidence that Republicans have a stronger preference for masculinity than Democrats, and that the Republican Party has a more masculine image than the Democratic Party: • https://t.co/z6eFIWJJRh • https://t.co/svwU6
@djpressman @MCrowderMeyer @jrpjrpjrp @davidsmeyer1 There’s also Nick Winter’s really informative paper on the gendering of the parties over time using responses to the like/dislike Qs on the ANES. I would love to see someone extend the time series on that