Race, Gender, and the Politics of Incivility: How Identity Moderates Perceptions of Uncivil Discourse

Q1 Social Sciences
S. R. Gubitz
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract Many worry that uncivil discourse can undermine democratic processes. Yet, what exactly does it mean for discourse to be uncivil? I argue that there is systematic variation in perceptions of incivility based on the identity of those targeted by uncivil speech. Specifically, I show—via a conjoint survey experiment—that White Americans are less likely to view statements directed at Black Americans as uncivil but more likely to perceive incivility when the target is a woman or a co-partisan. These results suggest an identity-laden aspect of incivility such that it is acceptable to treat Black Americans with less civility but less acceptable to do so for women and co-partisans. The results have implications for how we assess discourse and how that discourse affects the public.
种族、性别和不文明的政治:身份如何调节不文明话语的感知
许多人担心不文明的言论会破坏民主进程。然而,话语不文明究竟意味着什么?我认为,基于不文明言论所针对的对象的身份,对不文明的看法存在系统性差异。具体来说,我通过一项联合调查实验表明,美国白人不太可能认为针对黑人的言论是不文明的,但当目标是女性或共同党派时,他们更可能认为这是不文明的。这些结果表明了不文明行为的身份认同方面,因此对黑人不那么礼貌是可以接受的,但对女性和同党的人就不那么可以接受了。研究结果对我们如何评估话语以及话语如何影响公众具有启示意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
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