Black candidates facing white electorates

<p>It has long been assumed that when African American candidates compete in majority-white election environments, they adopt a 'deracilaised' campaign model that discards their racial identity in order to win white support. This paper finds that the ‘deracialised’ campaign model is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johnson, R
Other Authors: King, D
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
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author Johnson, R
author2 King, D
author_facet King, D
Johnson, R
author_sort Johnson, R
collection OXFORD
description <p>It has long been assumed that when African American candidates compete in majority-white election environments, they adopt a 'deracilaised' campaign model that discards their racial identity in order to win white support. This paper finds that the ‘deracialised’ campaign model is conceptually limited and not substantiated empirically. The thesis proposes three alternative models of racial appeal, which acknowledge the ability of black candidates to preserve black racial identity while appealing to whites for support. These models are applied in case studies of several significant senatorial campaigns (Brooke 1966, Gantt 1990, Braun 1992, Steele 2006, Ford 2006), which have been sourced using newspaper articles, television and radio advertisements, printed campaign literature, internal campaign documents, opinion polls, demographic data, and fifty interviews with candidates and campaign staff.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:1c7b09ba-b89b-41fb-a1aa-647b978794092022-03-26T11:05:51ZBlack candidates facing white electoratesThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:1c7b09ba-b89b-41fb-a1aa-647b97879409Political scienceEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Johnson, RKing, D<p>It has long been assumed that when African American candidates compete in majority-white election environments, they adopt a 'deracilaised' campaign model that discards their racial identity in order to win white support. This paper finds that the ‘deracialised’ campaign model is conceptually limited and not substantiated empirically. The thesis proposes three alternative models of racial appeal, which acknowledge the ability of black candidates to preserve black racial identity while appealing to whites for support. These models are applied in case studies of several significant senatorial campaigns (Brooke 1966, Gantt 1990, Braun 1992, Steele 2006, Ford 2006), which have been sourced using newspaper articles, television and radio advertisements, printed campaign literature, internal campaign documents, opinion polls, demographic data, and fifty interviews with candidates and campaign staff.</p>
spellingShingle Political science
Johnson, R
Black candidates facing white electorates
title Black candidates facing white electorates
title_full Black candidates facing white electorates
title_fullStr Black candidates facing white electorates
title_full_unstemmed Black candidates facing white electorates
title_short Black candidates facing white electorates
title_sort black candidates facing white electorates
topic Political science
work_keys_str_mv AT johnsonr blackcandidatesfacingwhiteelectorates