How Voters Feel

This is a book about voting - what people think they are doing when they cast a vote.

Stephen Coleman (Author)

9781107014602, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 25 February 2013

280 pages
21.8 x 14.7 x 2.3 cm, 0.48 kg

'… if it's elections without stats you're after, this is your book.' Chris Game, Local Government Studies

This book sets out to unearth the hidden genealogies of democracy, and particularly its most widely recognized, commonly discussed and deeply symbolic act, voting. By exploring the gaps between voting and recognition, being counted and feeling counted, having a vote and having a voice and the languor of count taking and the animation of account giving, there emerges a unique insight into how it feels to be a democratic citizen. Based on a series of interviews with a variety of voters and non-voters, the research attempts to understand what people think they are doing when they vote; how they feel before, during and after the act of voting; how performances of voting are framed by memories, narratives and dreams; and what it means to think of oneself as a person who does (or does not) vote. Rich in theory, this is a contribution to election studies that takes culture seriously.

1. What voting means
2. Narratives of voting
3. Memories of the ballot box
4. Acquiring the habit
5. The burden of being represented
6. Spaces of disappearance
7. Becoming us
8. Who feels what, when, and how.

Subject Areas: Political structures: democracy [JPHV], Elections & referenda [JPHF], Political structure & processes [JPH], Media studies [JFD]