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Mobilizing Public Opinion: Black Insurgency and Racial Attitudes in the Civil Rights Era (Studies in Communication, Media, and Public Opinion)
 
 
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Mobilizing Public Opinion: Black Insurgency and Racial Attitudes in the Civil Rights Era (Studies in Communication, Media, and Public Opinion) [Paperback]

Taeku Lee (Author)

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Book Description

0226470253 978-0226470252 May 1, 2002 1
What motivates us to change our opinions during times of political protest and social unrest? To investigate this question, Taeku Lee's smartly argued book looks to the critical struggle over the moral principles, group interests, and racial animosities that defined public support for racial policies during the civil rights movement, from the late 1940s to the mid-1960s. Challenging the conventional view that public opinion is shaped by elites, Lee crafts an alternate account of the geographic, institutional, historical, and issue-specific contexts that form our political views. He finds that grassroots organizations and local protests of ordinary people pushed demands for social change into the consciousness of the general public. From there, Lee argues, these demands entered the policy agendas of political elites. Evidence from multiple sources including survey data, media coverage, historical accounts, and presidential archives animate his argument.

Ultimately, Mobilizing Public Opinion is a timely, cautionary tale about how we view public opinion and a compelling testament to the potential power of ordinary citizens.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Mobilizing Public Opinion is original and makes its argument ably. Lee critiques 'elite-driven, top-down' accounts of mass opinion with the specific case study of mass support for the civil rights advances in the postwar period. He presents his analysis in a carefully nuanced way and makes a fundamentally important point that is sure to be debated and extended to other cases." - David Sears, University of California, Los Angeles

From the Inside Flap

What motivates us to rethink and act on our opinions during times of political and social unrest? To investigate this question, Taeku Lee's smartly argued book looks to the critical struggle over the moral principles, group interests, and racial animosities that defined public support for racial policies during the civil rights movement, from the late 1940s to the mid-1960s. Challenging the conventional view that public opinion is shaped by elites, Lee crafts an alternate account of the geographic, institutional, historical, and issue-specific contexts that inform our political views. He finds that grassroots organizations and local protests of ordinary people pushed demands for social change into the consciousness of the general public. From there, Lee argues, these demands entered the policy agendas of political elites. Evidence from multiple sources, including survey data, media coverage, historical accounts, and presidential archives, animates his argument.

Ultimately, Mobilizing Public Opinion is a timely, cautionary tale about how we view public opinion and a compelling testament to the potential power of ordinary citizens.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The political status of African Americans in Selma, Alabama, at the time of the civil rights movement was an extreme example of the marginalization and exclusion facing black citizens throughout the Deep South. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
elite opinion theories, elite opinion theory, constituency mail, black counterelite, letters from southern whites, conventional political elites, activated opinion, discrimination within the federal government, racial attitude items, organizational mail, racial policy preferences, primary predispositions, black movement organizations, mass activation, opinion cues, black counterpublic, social welfare liberalism, perceived proximity, public political expression, racial group interests, party proximity, elite signals, institutional mobilization, latent opinion, elite cues
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
African Americans, United States, Supreme Court, John Zaller, New York Times, Cold War, James Meredith, White House, President Truman, Walter Lippmann, Los Angeles, Ole Miss, President Eisenhower, Republican Party, Jim Crow South, Harry Moore, Emmett Till, Party Proximity, President Kennedy, University of Mississippi, Voting Rights Act, Lyndon Johnson, North Carolina, Philip Converse, Public Opinion Quarterly
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