“Study of Religious References in Political Speeches”
(2008-09 Season)
David Domke is Professor and Chair, studies political leadership, news coverage, and social change, with particular interest in the dynamics of post-9/11 America.
Ph.D, Mass Communication, University of Minnesota, 1996
Office: CMU 102 Phone: 543-2662 E-Mail: [email protected]
Selected Publications
“God and Country: The partisan psychology of the presidency, religion, and nation,” Political Psychology, in-press (with Penelope Sheets and Anthony Greenwald).
The God strategy: How religion became a political weapon in America. Oxford University Press: New York, August 2010, Updated Edition (with Kevin Coe). Original edition published January 1, 2008.
“Terrorism’s cause and cure: The rhetorical regime of democracy in the US and UK,” Critical Studies on Terrorism, 2: 7-25 (with Fahed al-Sumait and Colin Lingle).
“Going public, crisis after crisis: The Bush administration and the press from September 11 to Saddam,” Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 10: 195-220 (with Sue Lockett John, Kevin Coe, and Erica Graham).
“Masculinity as political strategy: George W. Bush, the ‘war on terrorism,’ and an echoing press,” Journal of Women, Politics, and Policy, 29: 31-55 (with Kevin Coe, Meredith Bagley, Sheryl Cunningham, and Nancy Van Leuven).
“Going public as political strategy: The Bush administration, an echoing press, and passage of the U.S.A. Patriot Act,” Political Communication (July-September 2006), 23: 291-312, with Erica Graham, Kevin Coe, Sue Lockett John, and Ted Coopman.
“Petitioners or prophets? Presidential discourse, God, and the ascendancy of religious conservatives,” Journal of Communication, June 2006, 56: 309-330, with Kevin Coe.
God Willing? Political Fundamentalism in the White House, the “War on Terror,” and the Echoing Press. Published August 2004, Pluto Press.
“U.S. national identity, political elites, and a patriotic press following September 11,” Political Communication (January-March 2004), 21, 27-51, with John Hutcheson, Andre Billeaudeaux, and Philip Garland.
“Insights into U.S. racial hierarchy: Racial profiling, news sources, and September 11,” Journal of Communication (December 2003), 53: 606-623, with Philip Garland, Andre Billeaudeaux, and John Hutcheson.
“News framing and cueing of issue regimes: Explaining Clinton’s public approval in spite of scandal,” Public Opinion Quarterly (fall 2002), 66: 339-371, with Dhavan V. Shah, Mark D. Watts, and David P. Fan.
“The primes of our times?: An examination of the ‘power’ of visual images,” Journalism (August 2002) 3(2): 131-159, with David Perlmutter and Department of Communication PhD student Meg Spratt.
“Racial cues and political ideology: An examination of associative priming,” Communication Research (December 2001), 28: 772-801.
Awards
Outstanding Book of the Year, The God Strategy, Political Communication Division, National Communication Association, 2009 (with Kevin Coe)
2008 University of Washington Graduating Class Favorite Professor
2006 Washington state Professor of the Year, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and Council for Advancement and Support of Education
2006 Hillier Krieghbaum Under-40 Award for Oustanding Achievement in Research, Teaching, and Public Service, Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication
2005 National Doctoral Honors Seminar leader, National Communication Association
2004 Inaugural Knight Forum in Media and Religion Lecture, University of Southern California
2002 University of Washington Distinguished Teaching Award
1998 Catherine Covert Award for Year’s Outstanding Article in Journalism and Mass Communication History
1997 Nafziger-White Award for field’s outstanding dissertation (given by Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication).
From http://www.com.washington.edu/faculty/domke.html