harvard government 90fj syllabus

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1 Political Persuasion: Government 90fj Fall 2007 Professor D. Sunshine Hillygus Class Meeting: Mondays, 2-4pm CGIS Knafel N050 Office: 306 CGIS North Building (1737 Cambridge Street) OH: Thursdays, 11-12 Phone: (617) 496-4220 Email: [email protected] Required Readings The following books are required purchases (and should be available at the Coop) Diana C. Mutz, Paul M. Sniderman, Richard A. Brody (eds.). 1996. Political Persuasion and Attitude Change. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan Press. John Zaller. 1992. The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion. Cambridge Univ. Press Tali Mendelberg. 2001. The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the Norm of Equality, Princeton University Press In addition to the required texts, a sourcebook is available for purchase at Gnomon Copy on Mass Ave. and additional required readings may be found on the course website. Grading Grades will be earned on the basis of seminar participation (30%), writing assignments (30%), and a final paper (40%). For the research paper, students will be allowed to pick a topic of their choosing related to any aspect of political persuasion. The final paper (15-20 pages, double- spaced, 12-point font) is due January 11 at 5:00 pm. To encourage careful reading and reflection, students must generate at least 3 written questions on the weekly readings. These questions should be emailed to me by midnight on Sunday (Questions should be in the text of the messages, not sent as attachments.). These questions should try to clarify, challenge, expand, or otherwise synthesize the material for the week. Additionally, for each class, one student will be expected to help lead class discussion by presenting a brief critical analysis of the recommended reading (and how it relates to the readings) and another student must present a “real world” example of the persuasive concepts covered in that day’s readings. These efforts will be part of the seminar participation grade.

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Page 1: Harvard Government 90fj Syllabus

1

Political Persuasion: Government 90fjFall 2007

Professor D. Sunshine Hillygus

Class Meeting: Mondays, 2-4pm CGIS Knafel N050Office: 306 CGIS North Building (1737 Cambridge Street)OH: Thursdays, 11-12Phone: (617) 496-4220Email: [email protected]

Required ReadingsThe following books are required purchases (and should be available at the Coop) Diana C. Mutz, Paul M. Sniderman, Richard A. Brody (eds.). 1996. Political Persuasion and

Attitude Change. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan Press.

John Zaller. 1992. The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion. Cambridge Univ. Press

Tali Mendelberg. 2001. The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the Norm of Equality, Princeton University Press

In addition to the required texts, a sourcebook is available for purchase at Gnomon Copy on Mass Ave. and additional required readings may be found on the course website.

GradingGrades will be earned on the basis of seminar participation (30%), writing assignments (30%), and a final paper (40%). For the research paper, students will be allowed to pick a topic of their choosing related to any aspect of political persuasion. The final paper (15-20 pages, double-spaced, 12-point font) is due January 11 at 5:00 pm.

To encourage careful reading and reflection, students must generate at least 3 written questions on the weekly readings. These questions should be emailed to me by midnight on Sunday(Questions should be in the text of the messages, not sent as attachments.). These questions should try to clarify, challenge, expand, or otherwise synthesize the material for the week. Additionally, for each class, one student will be expected to help lead class discussion by presenting a brief critical analysis of the recommended reading (and how it relates to the readings) and another student must present a “real world” example of the persuasive concepts covered in that day’s readings. These efforts will be part of the seminar participation grade.

Page 2: Harvard Government 90fj Syllabus

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Tentative Course ScheduleSeptember 17 Introduction

September 24 Overview: Persuasion in Politics Selections from Mass Communication and American Social Thought Perloff, “Political Campaign Persuasion and its Discontents,” in The Persuasion

Handbook Campbell, The American Campaign, Chapter 2 Jones, “You Can Predict the 2004 Presidential Election (Maybe!)”

October 1 Conceptualizing and Measuring Persuasion Aristotle, On Rhetoric, Chapters 1-3, Book 1 McGuire, “Persuasion,” in George Miller (ed), Influence “Political Persuasion: The Birth of a Field of Study,” in Political Persuasion and

Attitude Change Perloff, The Dynamics of Persuasion, Chapters 3,5 Henry Brady, Richard Johnston, John Sides. “The Study of Campaigns.” In Henry Brady

and Richard Johnston (eds.), Capturing Campaign Effects

October 8 Columbus Day

October 15 Receiver Factors Converse, “Information Flow and the Stability of Partisan Attitudes,” Public Opinion

Quarterly McGraw and Hubbard. “Some of the people some of the time: Individual differences in

acceptance of political accounts,” in Political Persuasion and Attitude Change Taber and Lodge. “Motivated Skepticism in the Evaluation of Political Beliefs,”

American Journal of Political Science Hillygus and Shields, The Persuadable Voter, Chapters 1-2

October 22 Source Factors Perloff. The Dynamics of Persuasion, Chapter 6 Lazarsfeld, Berelson, and Gaudet, The People's Choice, Chapter 16 Kernell, Sam. excerpt Going Public Kuklinski and Hurley.“It’s A Matter Of Interpretation,” in Political Persuasion and

Attitude Change Beck, “The Social Calculus of Voting: Interpersonal, Media, and Organizational

Influences on Presidential Choices,” American Political Science Review

October 29 Message Factors Perloff. The Dynamics of Persuasion, Chapter 7 Ansolabehere and Iyengar. “The Craft of Political Advertising,” in Political Persuasion

and Attitude Change. Cobb and Kuklinski. “Changing Minds: Political Arguments and Political Persuasion” Nabi et al., “All Joking Aside,” Communication Monographs

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Jamieson. Everything you think you know about politics, Part II (+)Recommended: Ansolabehere and Iyengar. Going Negative excerpt in Quill Magazine

November 5 More about Message: Issue Content of Campaigns Petrocik, “Issue Ownership in Presidential Campaigns,” American Journal of Political

Science Sides, “The Origins of Campaign Agendas,” British Journal of Political Science Sigelman and Buell “Avoidance or Engagement? Issue Convergence in U.S. Presidential

Campaigns, 1960-2000,” American Journal of Political Science Hillygus and Shields, The Persuadable Voter, Chapter 6 Paper Proposals Due

November 12 Veteran’s Day

November 19 Channel Factors McLuhan, “Technology and Political Change” excerpt, In Mass Communication and

American Social Thought Kaid, “The effects of Political Information in the 2000 Presidential Campaign” American

Behavioral Scientist Gerber and Green, “The Effects of Canvassing, Telephone Calls, and Direct Mail on

Voter Turnout: A Field Experiment,” American Political Science Review Brader, “Striking a Responsive Chord: How Political Ads Motivate and Persuade Voters

by Appealing to Emotions,” American Journal of Political Science Chaiken and Eagly, “Communication modality as a determinant persuasion: the role of

communicator salience,” Journal of personality and social psychology

November 26 More about the Message, continued Mendelberg, The Race Card, Chap 1, 4-6 Bethany Anderson, “Dog-whistle Politics, Coded Communication and Religious

Appeals” Newspaper articles about microtargeting

December 4 More about the Source: Media Bias Lippmann, “Newspapers” Jamieson. Everything you know about politics, pg 187-195 Patterson. Out of Order, Chapters 1-2 Pew Report, “Misperceptions, The Media, and the Iraq War” Groseclose and Milyo, “A Measure of Media Bias” Miller and Krosnick, “News Media Impact on the Ingredients of Presidential

Evaluations,” in Political Persuasion and Attitude Change

December 10 Model of Attitude Change John Zaller. 1992. The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion, Chaps 1-3, 8-10

December 17 Wrap-up: Who Influences Whom in American Politics?

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Zaller, The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion, Chapter 12 Verba, “The Citizen as Respondent: Sample Surveys and American Democracy.”

American Political Science Review Jacobs and Shapiro, Politicians Don’t Pander, Chapters 1-2

Jan 11: Final paper due in my mailbox at 5:00 pm