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Morality and the Glass Ceiling: How Elite Rhetoric Reflects Gendered Strategies and Perspectives

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posted on 2023-11-07, 06:32 authored by Laura Brisbane, Whitney Hua, Thomas JamiesonThomas Jamieson
AbstractMoral rhetoric presents a strategic dilemma for female politicians, who must navigate stereotypes while appealing to copartisan voters. In this article, we investigate how gender shapes elite moral rhetoric given the influence of partisanship, ideology, gender stereotypes, and moral psychology. Drawing on moral foundations theory, we examine how female and male representatives differ in their emphasis on the five foundations of care, fairness, authority, loyalty, and purity. Using the Moral Foundations Dictionary, we analyze a corpus of 2.23 million tweets by U.S. Congress members between 2013 and 2021. We find that female representatives are more likely to emphasize care and less likely to emphasize authority and loyalty than their male peers. However, when subsetting by party, we find that gender effects are most pronounced among Democrats and largely negligible among Republicans. These findings offer insight into the rhetorical dynamics of political leadership at the intersection of gender and partisan identities.

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Preferred citation

Brisbane, L., Hua, W. & Jamieson, T. (2023). Morality and the Glass Ceiling: How Elite Rhetoric Reflects Gendered Strategies and Perspectives. Politics & Gender, 19(3), 806-840. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1743923x2200023x

Journal title

Politics & Gender

Volume

19

Issue

3

Publication date

2023-09-01

Pagination

806-840

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2023-01-09

ISSN

1743-923X

eISSN

1743-9248

Language

en

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