ANGIE’S SELECTED WRITINGS

WASHINGTON POST
What We Get Wrong about the Southern Strategy
It took much longer—and went much further—than we think

WASHINGTON POST
Why Southern White Women Vote Against Feminism
The often overlooked question that explains why discussion of a gender gap leads us astray

ARKANSAS TIMES
The Tragic Irony of Our Political Assumptions

MEDIUM.COM
How to Survive the Next 72 Weeks:
Advice for Progressives from an Exhausted Political Scientist

VQR
Donald Trump and the Lost Cause

VOX.COM
How Southern Racism Found a Home in the Tea Party

HUFFINGTON POST
‘Fiscal Responsibility’ Was Always a Red Herring

DIANE D. BLAIR CENTER OF SOUTHERN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
The Impact of “Modern Sexism” on the 2016 Presidential Election

UNC PRESS BLOG
Angie Maxwell: The Long Shadow of Scopes

SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY
Angie Maxwell and Stephanie Schulte, “Racial Resentment Attitudes among White Youth: The Influence of Parents and Media.” Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 99, no. 3 (2018).

PS
Angie Maxwell. “A Tale of Two Tea Parties? Southern Distinctiveness and Tea Party Membership.” PS, Vol. 49, no. 2 (April 2016): 210-214.

POLITICS, GROUPS, AND IDENTITIES
Angie Maxwell, “Untangling the Gender Gap in Symbolic Racist Attitudes Among White Americans.” Politics, Groups, and Identities, Vol. 3, no. 1 (February 2015): 59-72. Reprinted in in Gender and Political Psychology edited by Zoe M. Oxley. Routledge, 2016.

SOUTHERN CULTURES
Angie Maxwell, “‘The Duality of the Southern Thing’: A Snapshot of ‘Southern’ Politics in the Twenty-first Century” Southern Cultures (Winter 2014): 85-109.

RACE AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS
Angie Maxwell and Todd Shields, “The Fate of Obamacare: Symbolic Racism, Ethnocentrism and Healthcare Reform” Race and Social Problems, Vol. 6 (2014): 293-304.

AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST
Jan L. Wicks, Shauna Morimoto, Angie Maxwell, Stephanie Schulte, and Robert H. Wicks, “Youth Political Consumerism and the 2012 Presidential Election: What Influences Youth Boycotting and Buycotting?” American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 58, no. 5 (May 2014): 715-732.

AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST
Robert H. Wicks, Jan L. Wicks, Shauna Morimoto, Angie Maxwell, and Stephanie Schulte, “Correlates of Political and Civic Engagement Among Youth During the 2012 Presidential Campaign” in American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 58, no. 5 (May 2014): 622-644.

RACE AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS
Angie Maxwell and Wayne Parent, “A ‘Subterranean Agenda’? Racism and Tea Party Membership” Race and Social Problems, Vol. 5, no. 3 (September 2013): 226-237. 

SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY
Angie Maxwell, Pearl Ford Dowe, and Todd Shields, “The Next Link in the Chain Reaction: Symbolic Racism and Obama’s Religious Affiliation” Social Science Quarterly, Vol 94, no. 2 (June 2013): 321-343.

SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY
Angie Maxwell and Wayne Parent, “The Obama Trigger: Presidential Approval and Tea Party Membership” Social Science Quarterly Vol. 93, no. 5 (December 2012) :1384-1401.

AMERICAN REVIEW OF POLITICS
Angie Maxwell, “The Impact of C. Vann Woodward’s The Burden of Southern History.American Review of Politics, Vol. 32 (Summer 2011).

PRESIDENTIAL STUDIES QUARTERLY
Pearl K. Ford, Angie Maxwell, and Todd Shields, “What’s the Matter with Arkansas? Symbolic Racism and Voter Choice” Presidential Studies Quarterly Vol. 40, no. 20 (Spring 2010): 286-302.

JOURNAL OF BLACK STUDIES
Pearl K. Ford, Angie Maxwell, and Tekla A. Johnson, “ ‘Yes We Can’ or ‘Yes We Did’: Prospective and Retrospective Change in the Obama Presidency” Journal of Black Studies  Vol. 40, no. 3 (January 2010): 462-483.

THE SOUTHERN QUARTERLY
Angie Maxwell, “The South Beheld: The Influence of James Agee on James Dickey.” The Southern Quarterly 42:2 (Winter 2004): 135-151.