Government 252

The Psychology of Politics

Ron SeybOffice Hours:

Ladd 310M&W, 12:30-2:30 PM

Ext. 5248Fall 2015

Course Description

This course addresses three questions: (1) Why do some Americans choose to pursue careers in politics? (2) How do political elites make choices? (3) What effect do these choices have on public policy and civic engagement? Political psychologists seek answers to these questions by exploring the motives, beliefs, and personality characteristics of and social influences on political leaders. The course will demonstrate that the reasons political actors give for their behavior are rarely accurate. Much political behavior is driven by unconscious motives, irrational beliefs, personality traits, and information-processing biases that can lead political actors to endorse policies that are contrary to their interests and choose courses of action that are counterproductive, immoral, or destructive.

The first half of the course will address why political actors make such "foolish" choices by exploring how they acquire their personality traits and belief systems, process information, and respond to the demands of their social and political environments. The course's second half will explore both the techniques for and the consequences of political leaders' attempts to "market" these choices to an at times skeptical, at times indifferent public.

Course Goals

The course is designed to enable students to

1. Appreciate the distinctive contribution that political psychology makes to the study of political behavior

2. Understand the ways that cognitive biases, social influence, and personality traits can prevent even the most capable of leaders from acting “rationally”

3. Analyze how political leaders employ various communication techniques to lead their audiences to draw erroneous conclusions or treat as indisputable facts what are really contestable propositions

4. Acquire a better understanding of why political leaders sometimes seem to lose their moral compass when making decisions that have a conspicuous moral dimension

Course Requirements

(1) There will be three in-class examinations: a short answer examination on Friday, October 2(15%), a midterm examination on Friday, October 23 (25%) and a final examination to be administered onWednesday, December 16 at 6:00 PM(25%).

(2) You will be required to write a 12-15 page psychobiography of a president of your choice that uses Don McAdams’s George W. Bush and the Redemptive Dream to inform your analysis. This assignment will account for 35% of your course grade.

You will complete your psychobiography in three stages: (1) You will on Friday, September 25submitthe name of the president whose psychobiography you wish to write. Failure to submit your choice by the deadline will result in a 10% deduction from your final grade on the psychobiography. (2) You will onFriday, November 13 submit a 2-3 page paper that will constitute the introductory section of your paper. You will in this section present both your thesis and your paper’s conceptual framework. Your grade on this paper will account for 15% of your final grade on the psychobiography assignment. And (3) You will on Monday, December 7submit your final 12-15 page psychobiography.

Attendance

You are allowed to miss 4 (four) classes. There are no excused absences. I do not grant excused absences for two reasons: (1) I am unable to discriminate between a valid and an invalid excuse for an absence (i.e., I cannot tell the difference between those illnesses, cosmic events, and Ant Man caliber life changes that are serious and those that are trivial), and (2) Four absences allow you to miss more than a week of class without incurring any penalty. That is more generous than Joe Biden’s hug policy. I will treat tardies as absences. I do often say significant things at the outset of class about readings, assignments, Biblical plague forecasts, etc. It is hence important that you be present at 8:40 AM.

I will deduct 2% from your final grade for each absence over the 3 absence limit (e.g., a student who earns a cumulative score of “90” (A-) on the course assignments who compiles 4 absences will receive an “88” (B+) for the course).

If you reach four absences, I will send you an email alerting you that your next absence will cause me to deduct 2%from your course grade.

You should also keep in mind that according to The Academic Information Guide, "any students who miss more than a third of the [class] sessions may expect to be barred from [the] final examination. In such cases, the course grade will be recorded as F."

Laptops and Tablets

Laptops and tablets are not allowed in class. I have first-hand experience with the temptations of social media (#emojiaffectation). I hence recognize that not even the most steely of wills can resist these near occasions of sin. Students who have a disability that precludes them from taking notes with any instrument other than a laptop must provide me with documentation testifying to their “laptop needs” by the end of the second week of classes (i.e., Friday, September 18)

Smart Phones and Their Ilk

I recognize that phones are now such an essential accessory that they are a staple of the JustFab accessory wall. You, nonetheless, cannot use these devices during class because, while I know that there is some dispute about this, the preponderance of the evidence suggests that they are distraction machines and not sparkling amulets of knowledge production. If I do see you texting in class or otherwise interacting with this portal to 140 character burrito commentary, I will send you an email reminding you of the policy. Should I see you using your tech gear a second time, I will deduct two points from your course grade, with additional two point deductions tacked on for each additional time I identify a criminal pattern (NB: I do not accept appeals of the nature of “But I wasn’t texting.” You hence should try to avoid giving off even the appearance of texting).

Books

The following books can be purchased at The Skidmore Shop for less than it cost for a bottle of “Just for Bernie: The Only Hair Product Tested by Bernie Sanders in a Category Four Hurricane”:

Kevin Arceneaux and Martin Johnson, Changing Minds or Changing Channels?

Dan McAdams, George W. Bush and the Redemptive Dream

Lauren Slater, Opening Skinner's Box

Drew Westen, The Political Brain

Important Note about The Hodges Harbrace Handbook

All Government majors are now required to own a copy of The Hodges Harbrace Handbook. While it would be ideal if you owned the most recent edition of this style guide (the 18th edition), you certainly can manage with an earlier edition in the same way that Andy Cohen manages to be entertaining without a soul.

Weekly Topics and Reading Assignments

Note: An asterisk (*) denotes a reading available on Blackboard

Week 1: (September 9-11): Political Leadership in America

Readings: *Garry Wills, Introduction to Certain Trumpets

*Garry Wills, “Business in Gettysburg,” in Lincoln at Gettysburg

Week 2(September 14-18): The Empathic Leader

Readings: *Colleen Shogun, “The Political Utility of Empathy in Presidential Leadership,” Presidential Studies Quarterly (December 2009)

*Garry Wills, “Electoral Leader: Franklin Roosevelt,” in Certain Trumpets

Week 3 (September 21-25): Deliberative Choice v. Automatic Processing: The Habits of Highly Effective and Ineffective Leaders

Readings: *Daniel Kahneman, “The Characters of the Story,” in Thinking, Fast and Slow

*Charles Duhigg, “The Power of a Crisis: How Leaders Create Habits through Accidents and Design,” The Power of Habit

*Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, “Introduction” to Nudge

SELECTION OF PRESIDENT FOR PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY DUE (Must Be Submitted by 5:00 PM)

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 AT 5:00 PM

Week 4 (September 28-October 2) Political Beliefs: Feelings Shape Preferences

Readings: *Shanto Iyengar, et al., “Affect, Not Ideology: A Social Identity Perspective on Polarization,”Public Opinion Quarterly (Fall 2012)

*Russell Granger, “Donald Trump May Be the Most Emotionally Persuasive Candidate in the 2016 Presidential Race,” Business insider (August 5, 2015)

SHORT ANSWER EXAMINATION

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2

Week 5 (October 5-9): Is It Just Emotion That’s Taking Me Over? Partisanship and Emotional Intelligence

Readings: Westen, Chapters 1-4

*Kathyrn Schulz, “Denial and Acceptance,” inBeing Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error

Week 6 (October 12-16): Personality and Political Choice

Readings: McAdams, Introduction and Chapters 1, 2, and 4

Week 7 (October 19-23): Does Personality Matter?

Readings: Slater, Chapters 2 and 3, and 5

MIDTERM EXAMINATION

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23

Week 8 (October 26-30): Bad Decisions by Good People

Readings: Slater, Chapter 4

*Irving Janis, “A Perfect Failure: The Bay of Pigs,” inGroupthink

Week 9 (November 2-6): The New Language of Leadership

Readings:*Molly Ball, “The Agony of Frank Luntz,” The Atlantic (January 6, 2014)

*James Geary, “Freedom Fries and Liberty Cabbage,” in I Is an Other

Westen, Chapter 11

Week 10 (November 9-13): Big Data Creates Small Targets

Readings: *Sasha Issenberg, “Nudge the Vote,” The New York Times Magazine (October 29, 2010)

*Sasha Issenberg, “Dept. of Experiments,” Politico (February 27, 2014)

INTRODUCTORY SECTION OF PSYCHOBIOGAPHY DUE

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13

Week 11 (November 16-20): Shaping the Electorate via Political Advertising:

Readings: *Paul Martin,“Inside the Black Box of Negative Campaign Effects: Three Reasons Why Negative Campaigns Mobilize,” Political Psychology (2004)

Week 12 (November 23): Catch-Up

Readings: No Reading

THANKSGIVING BREAK

Week 13 (November 30-December 4): Partisan Media and Partisan Polarization

Readings: Arceneaux and Johnson, Chapters 1-4

Week 14(December 7-11): Partisan Media and Opting Out of Citizenship

Readings: Arceneaux and Johnson, Chapters 5-7

PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY DUE (Must Be Submitted by 5:00 PM)

MONDAY, DECEMBER 7

FINAL EXAMINATION

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 6:00-9:00 PM, LADD 207

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