George E. Marcus
YOU?
Author Swipe
View article: Evaluating the status of theories of emotion in political science and psychology
Evaluating the status of theories of emotion in political science and psychology Open
Emotion is an increasingly influential area of research in psychology, political psychology, political science, and other social sciences. Research is best when driven by theory because the absence of theory generates research that can lac…
View article: Evaluating the Status of Theories of Emotion in Political Science and Psychology
Evaluating the Status of Theories of Emotion in Political Science and Psychology Open
Emotion is an increasing influential area of research in psychology, political psychology, political science and other social sciences. Research is best when driven by theory because the absence of theory generates research that is subject…
View article: Hidden Affections: Presumptions that Continue to Misshape The Measurement of Emotion
Hidden Affections: Presumptions that Continue to Misshape The Measurement of Emotion Open
All empirical investigations rely on formative presumptions. Over the past 70 plus years, research on emotion has long been reliant on data collected using subjective responses and by experimental exposure to target stimuli, and increasing…
View article: The Para-Site in Ethnographic Research Projects
The Para-Site in Ethnographic Research Projects Open
The following three paragraphs introduce an experimental exercise that was in ven ted at the inception of the Center for Ethnography at the University of California Irvine (uci) in 2006. 1 This exercise lies within and in relation to the p…
View article: Foreword: The Play’s the Thing
Foreword: The Play’s the Thing Open
The Play's the ThingThe last thirty years have been a seminal period of critique, rethinking, and experimentation with anthropology's sustaining genre formthe ethnography.A key concern of this activity has been to create texts that enliven…
View article: Anger Mediates the Effects of Fear on Support for the Far Right—A Rejoinder
Anger Mediates the Effects of Fear on Support for the Far Right—A Rejoinder Open
We are grateful to John Jost for carefully engaging with our work and presenting a different interpretation of our findings on the effects of fear and anger stemming from the November 13, 2015, Paris attacks on the propensity to vote for t…
View article: Applying the Theory of Affective Intelligence to Support for Authoritarian Policies and Parties
Applying the Theory of Affective Intelligence to Support for Authoritarian Policies and Parties Open
Emotion, after a long period of inattention, began to attract greater scrutiny as a key driver of human behavior in the mid‐1980s. One approach that has achieved significant influence in political science is affective intelligence theory (…
View article: Fear, Anger, and Voting for the Far Right: Evidence From the November 13, 2015 Paris Terror Attacks
Fear, Anger, and Voting for the Far Right: Evidence From the November 13, 2015 Paris Terror Attacks Open
The conjecture that negative emotions underpin support for far‐right politics is common among pundits and scholars. The conventional account holds that authoritarian populists catalyze public anxiety about the changing social order and/or …
View article: Hardwired for News: Affective Intelligence and Political Attention
Hardwired for News: Affective Intelligence and Political Attention Open
Experimental Political Science has been notably successful in recent years in teasing out the dynamics of how emotional reactions to issues and events lead to alternatively to political learning and deliberation or to hardening of politica…