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Ideology in America Kindle Edition
- ISBN-13978-1107019034
- PublisherCambridge University Press
- Publication dateApril 16, 2012
- LanguageEnglish
- File size4253 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
―Morris P. Fiorina, Stanford University
“This is a compelling book on an interesting and important topic. Ellis and Stimson provide a driving analysis of seemingly every facet of the match and mismatch between people’s policy preferences and ideological identification in America. Predictably strong on social science, the book also is accessible, readable, and engaging. Ideology in America is as good as it gets.”
―Christopher Wlezien, Temple University
“With Ideology in America, Christopher Ellis and James Stimson have taken a giant step forward in understanding the complex and seemingly contradictory character of left and right in America. Their book not only explains the simultaneous presence of symbolic conservatism and operational liberalism, but points to perhaps the most important constituency in elections, the conflicted conservative.”
―Thomas B. Edsall, Joseph Pulitzer II and Edith Pulitzer Moore Professor, Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, author of Age of Austerity
“Ellis and Stimson shed much-needed light on the complex nature of ideology in the United States by examining the distinction between operational and symbolic ideology in the American public. Ideology in America is clear, engaging, and insightful―required reading for scholars and students of public opinion, political polarization, and American political development.”
―Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University
“In this extended treatment of the paradox of symbolic conservatism and operational liberalism Ellis and Stimson present important evidence for the continuation of the phenomenon first uncovered by Free and Cantril in 1967. They demonstrate that these ‘conflicted conservatives’ remain numerous despite the apparent polarization of the electorate in the recent past, that they differ from the general electorate, and are a force sufficient to change close presidential election outcomes. This is accomplished against the background of a fascinating account of the decline in the symbolic resonance of liberal identification since the 1930s, and of the non-political meanings of conservatism.”
―Kathleen Knight, Columbia University
“In typically insightful fashion, Ellis and Stimson expound on a fundamental issue in political science: ideology. Jam-packed with data, this book provides an historical account of ideology and the paradox of conservative symbolism and liberal policy preferences. The driving explanations for the paradox, which are Americans’ attitudes towards religion and culture as well as the policy frames of elite actors, are thoroughly documented and convincing. Ellis and Stimson’s pathbreaking work is a must-read for scholars in American politics and political thought.”
―Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, University Distinguished Scholar, Ohio State University
“In this excellent book, Ellis and Stimson use a sophisticated methodological approach to trace the ebb and flow of ideology in American public opinion over the past 75 years. Their insights are relevant to a variety of audiences. For journalists, commentators, and pundits, Ellis and Stimson show that the public’s liberal-conservative orientations cannot be extracted readily either from election results or from public opinion survey questions. For academics, Stimson and Ellis elaborate on the scholarly consensus that the mass public is largely ‘innocent of ideology.’ Instead, they demonstrate systematic patterns in the ways that citizens ‘misuse’ liberal-conservative terminology to describe their own political orientations. This book represents a major step forward in understanding how ordinary citizens think about the political world.”
―William G. Jacoby, Department of Political Science, Michigan State University; ICPSR, University of Michigan
About the Author
James A. Stimson earned his B.A. from the University of Minnesota and his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina. Stimson is former President of the Midwest Political Science Association and Treasurer of the American Political Science Association. He has authored or co-authored six books: Yeas and Nays (with Donald R. Matthews), Issue Evolution (with Edward G. Carmines), Public Opinion in America, The Macro Polity (with Robert S. Erikson and Michael B. MacKuen), Tides of Consent and Mandate Politics (with Larry Grossback and David A. M. Peterson). A Fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he has won the Heinz Eulau and Gladys Kammerer Awards of the American Political Science Association. He is founding editor of Political Analysis and has authored articles in all the major journals of political science.
Product details
- ASIN : B00E3UR5OM
- Publisher : Cambridge University Press (April 16, 2012)
- Publication date : April 16, 2012
- Language : English
- File size : 4253 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Up to 4 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 228 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1107687411
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,089,070 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3,840 in Federal Government
- #5,625 in Ideologies & Doctrines
- #14,424 in U.S. Political Science
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If I had to have one criticism, there is a whole sub-class of "conflicted conservative" I think was left out of consideration. While there may not be many of us nationally, I think there are quite a few strategically placed in low population political districts through the nation
I speak of "conflicted conservative" who wears the label conservative, or Republican (as terms are often conflated these days) because the area they live in would simply not accept them if they were liberals, or Democrats (terms that are also often conflated).
I live in such an area in Fulton County, NY. Almost all elections are decided in the primaries. If you are not a Republican, even if you secretly hold largely liberal views, you're essentially disenfranchised. Nothing that I read seriously accounts for the possibility of people who might otherwise be liberal Democrats becoming supposed conservative Republicans simply to have a say in the outcome of primaries, which almost always decide election outcomes for November.
Again, in some place like New York City, this might be a statistical blip. However, in much more sparsely populated upstate New York, it can determine Congressional districts. And these rural upstate areas are where a whole bunch of symbolically conservative but operationally liberal middle knowledge voters are located.
It's something to consider
The whole book is around one idea: when you measure people's ideas, they seem to be pretty liberal (socially or economically), yet, when people are asked to identify themselves, americans tend to consider themselves pretty conservatives. This has many practical consequences, at least potentially: republicans can 'win' the battle of ideas/symbols, but not at a policy level. For someone like me, coming from Europe, this is surprising (in Europe, the situation is pretty much the opposite)
The book is an academic work, with a ton of considerations about measurement and so on, but it reads very well and is relatively short.





