Democracy Lives in Darkness: How and Why People
Keep Their Politics a Secret
*Forthcoming
book with Oxford University Press*
https://www.emilyvanduyn.com/democracy-lives-in-darkness
Democracy
Lives in Darkness: How and Why People Keep Their Politics a Secret is my
forthcoming book (2021) with Oxford University Press in the Journalism and
Political Communication Unbound series.
"Republicans
and Democrats increasingly distrust, avoid, and wish ill upon those from the
opposite party. To make matters worse, they also increasingly reside among
like-minded others and are part of social groups that share their political
beliefs. All of this can make expressing a dissenting political opinion hard.
Yet, digital and social media have given people new channels for political
discourse, new spaces for building congenial communities, and more control over
the visibility of their political identity. The upcropping of secret Facebooks
groups before, during, and after the 2016 U.S. election laid bare the fact that
even mainstream Republicans and Democrats can and do seek out ways to hide
their political beliefs from others.
This book
looks at what these changes in the political and media landscape mean for the
practice and study of democracy. I uncover and follow a secret political
organization in rural Texas over two years. The group, which organized out of
fear of their conservative community, has a confidentiality agreement, a
private membership, an email listserv and secret Facebook group, and meets in
secret every month. By gaining access to and building relationships with
members, I explore why they hide their beliefs, how they organize with others
intentionally in private, and what this does for both their own political
behavior and the politics of their community.
Drawing on
research from communication, political science, and sociology, I tell a
different story about contemporary democracy than what is currently told. I
argue that portions of the public may be silent in one context but not silent
altogether; may care about politics but are afraid of making their beliefs
public. This work challenges existing assumptions of liberal democracy in the
United States. As the public becomes increasingly polarized and sorted, and as
digital media makes it easier for individuals to communicate and organize in
secret, the potential for and scope of political secrecy becomes more likely,
even for those within the national mainstream."
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