Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics

Political representation remains one of the areas in American life in which gender inequality is most pronounced, and scholars claim that women’s reluctance to run for office is now the most significant barrier to gender equality in the political sphere. Yet, researchers have not adequately grapple...

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Main Author: Frederick, Angela Howard
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5107
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-05-51072015-09-20T17:07:48ZStorytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politicsWomen narrating race and gender in Texas politicsFrederick, Angela HowardGenderPoliticsPolitical sociologySocial movementsNarrativePolitical representation remains one of the areas in American life in which gender inequality is most pronounced, and scholars claim that women’s reluctance to run for office is now the most significant barrier to gender equality in the political sphere. Yet, researchers have not adequately grappled with the complexities and contradictions in women’s “deciding to run” accounts and have often overlooked the varied narrative strategies of women leaders across race, class, and social movement identities. I conducted 46 interviews with women leaders in Texas and fieldwork in a political campaign to examine the stories women tell to explain their decisions whether or not to run for office. I find that the “deciding to run” narratives that African-American women and Latinas employ are distinct from the stories white women use to explain their decisions whether or not to run for office, as they more often draw from civil rights discourses of courage, confidence, and commitment to their causes. I argue that feminist organizations actually encourage women to downplay their political ambition in the attempt to spread their social movement messages that women need to be recruited more heavily to run for office. These messages play an important role in influencing the reluctance story told by most of the white women I interviewed. I argue that structural factors such as majority-minority and majority-white voting districts also play a large role in shaping the “deciding to run” accounts of candidates and potential candidates, as raced-gendered and social movement discourses take different forms and carry varying weight in these political contexts. My findings challenge the dominant explanation for women’s sparse levels of office-holding, which suggests that women are under-represented in politics because they lack the confidence to enter political races. In addition, I highlight the political ambition of African-American women and Latinas, whose remarkable success records in seeking and winning elective office have not been accounted for in current paradigms explaining women’s under-representation. Finally, my research exposes the cultural dynamics underlying women’s “deciding to run” explanations, as I illuminate how women draw from raced-gendered and social movement discourses to account for their political decisions.text2012-07-19T13:53:18Z2012-07-19T13:53:18Z2012-052012-07-19May 20122012-07-19T13:53:29Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-51072152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5107eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Gender
Politics
Political sociology
Social movements
Narrative
spellingShingle Gender
Politics
Political sociology
Social movements
Narrative
Frederick, Angela Howard
Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics
description Political representation remains one of the areas in American life in which gender inequality is most pronounced, and scholars claim that women’s reluctance to run for office is now the most significant barrier to gender equality in the political sphere. Yet, researchers have not adequately grappled with the complexities and contradictions in women’s “deciding to run” accounts and have often overlooked the varied narrative strategies of women leaders across race, class, and social movement identities. I conducted 46 interviews with women leaders in Texas and fieldwork in a political campaign to examine the stories women tell to explain their decisions whether or not to run for office. I find that the “deciding to run” narratives that African-American women and Latinas employ are distinct from the stories white women use to explain their decisions whether or not to run for office, as they more often draw from civil rights discourses of courage, confidence, and commitment to their causes. I argue that feminist organizations actually encourage women to downplay their political ambition in the attempt to spread their social movement messages that women need to be recruited more heavily to run for office. These messages play an important role in influencing the reluctance story told by most of the white women I interviewed. I argue that structural factors such as majority-minority and majority-white voting districts also play a large role in shaping the “deciding to run” accounts of candidates and potential candidates, as raced-gendered and social movement discourses take different forms and carry varying weight in these political contexts. My findings challenge the dominant explanation for women’s sparse levels of office-holding, which suggests that women are under-represented in politics because they lack the confidence to enter political races. In addition, I highlight the political ambition of African-American women and Latinas, whose remarkable success records in seeking and winning elective office have not been accounted for in current paradigms explaining women’s under-representation. Finally, my research exposes the cultural dynamics underlying women’s “deciding to run” explanations, as I illuminate how women draw from raced-gendered and social movement discourses to account for their political decisions. === text
author Frederick, Angela Howard
author_facet Frederick, Angela Howard
author_sort Frederick, Angela Howard
title Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics
title_short Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics
title_full Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics
title_fullStr Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics
title_full_unstemmed Storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in Texas politics
title_sort storytelling on the stump : women narrating race and gender in texas politics
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5107
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