“This is a very exciting book, and one of the finest pieces of work in the area of politics, identity, and the mass media. It will have a broad impact on the fields of American political psychology, public opinion, political communication, and racial and gender attitudes.”
— Nicholas Valentino, University of Texas at Austin
“This is an elegantly designed and smartly argued analysis of how race and gender work in our minds. The core claim—that how an issue is framed can have eye-catching effects on what we think and how we think about that issue—is given a rock-solid empirical underpinning. These findings are made more profound by the additional nuance that framing effects wield a power that extends beyond race and beyond policy issues that explicitly evoke racial and gender considerations. We have, many of us, always strongly suspected that the reach of race and gender in our political psyche is seemingly ubiquitous. Now we have a better sense of why that is the case.”
— Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
"[This book] examines the remarkably subtle ways in which citizens' understandings of race and gender can change their attitutdes about various political issues—even those that ostensibly have little to do with race or gender. Winter offers a new theory and a considerable body of empirical evidence in support of this theory; scholars interested in race, gender, political communication, and public opinion will likely find both compelling."
— Kevin Coe, Public Opinion Quarterly
"Dangerous Frames proves relevant not only to the field of political science but also to history, sociology, cognitive science and others. . . . An enlightening volume that reveals the continuing salience of race and gender to the American political psyche."—Guy Lancaster, Political Studies Review
— Guy Lancaster, Political Studies Review
"Winter's book makes a solid contribution to the literatures on framing, policy judgment, and race and gender, and it will be enjoyed by scholars interested in any or all of these topics."
— Christopher M. Federico, Journal of Politics
"This is an excellent book that will stimulate discussion in a range of graduate courses. Winter does a superb job of engaging literatures on race, gender, politics, political psychology, and rhetoric and helping readers understand what this means for American democracy. . . . Frames, in short, are powerful and potentially dangerous."
— Deana A. Rohlinger, American Journal of Sociology