Ryan Strickler
University of South Carolina
7 Papers
4 Citations
Ryan Strickler is an academic researcher from University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polarization (politics) & Public opinion. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Deliberate with the Enemy? Polarization, Social Identity, and Attitudes toward Disagreement:
TL;DR: This article explored how mass polarization impacts the preconditions for such discourse and found that strong social attachments to one's party consistently drive antideliberative attitudes toward disagreement; ideological partisan attachment, however, does not have this effect.
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Rule by Violence, Rule by Law: The Evolution of Voter Suppression and Lynching in the U.S. South
TL;DR: This paper found that lynchings were more likely to take place prior to elections and in areas where the Democratic Party faced greater political threat, until Jim Crow suppression laws were in place.
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The curious life of an ancient literary forgery
TL;DR: A close study of the History of the Destruction of Troy , a late-antique literary production attributed to Dares Phrygius, who Isidore of Seville referred to as the first pagan historian and supposed eyewitness to the Trojan War, is given in this article .
Dehumanisation, Apocalypticism, and Anti-Judaism: Reflections on Identity Formation in Seventh-Century Byzantium
Ryan Strickler
- 07 Feb 2022
TL;DR: The authors examines how many seventh-century authors used apocalyptic discourse to transform Roman and Christian identity in the face of defeat, and finds evidence that even in the territories that had fallen to the Muslims, some writers sought to ensure their fellow Christians that their status as God's chosen people remained intact.
Bringing Together Spatial Demography and Political Science: Reexamining the Big Sort
David Darmofal,Ryan Strickler +1 more
- 01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: The authors examine the arguments in Bishop's The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America is Tearing us Apart from the perspective of a stronger synthesis between demographers and political scientists and argue that such a synthesis can provide considerable insights into the question of the geographic sorting of partisans.