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SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Book

Gilmore, J., and Rowling, C.M. (March 11, 2021). Exceptional Me: How Donald Trump exploited the discourse of American exceptionalism. London, UK: I.B. Tauris/Bloomsbury.

Refereed Journal Articles

Gilmore, J., Rowling, C.M., Edwards, J.A., and Allen, N.T. (Forthcoming, September 2020). Exceptional ‘we’ or exceptional ‘me’?: Donald Trump, American exceptionalism and the remaking of the modern jeremiad. Presidential Studies Quarterly.

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Gilmore, J. and Rowling, C.M. (2019). Partisan patriotism in the American presidency: American exceptionalism, issue ownership, and the age of Trump. Mass Communication and Society,  22(3), 389-416.

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Dengah II, H., Gilmore, J., Brasileiro, M., Cohen, A., Thomas, E., Budge, J., Law, M., Swainston, J., and Thomas, R. (2019). Cultural models of raça: The calculus of Brazilian racial identity revisited. Journal of Anthropological Research, 75(2), 157-182.

 

Gilmore, J. and Rowling, C.M. (2018). Lighting the beacon: Presidential discourse, American exceptionalism, and public diplomacy in global contexts. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 48 (2), 271-291.

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Rowling, C. M., Sheets, P., McCue, P., and Gilmore, J. (2018). Consensus at home, opposition abroad: Officials, foreign sources, and US news coverage of drone warfare. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 95(4), 886-908.

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Gilmore, J., and Rowling, C.M. (2017). A post-American world? Assessing the cognitive and attitudinal impacts of challenges to American exceptionalism. The Communication Review, 21 (1), 46-65.

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Gilmore, J. and Rowling, C. M. (2017). The United States in Decline?: Assessing the impacts of international challenges to American exceptionalism. International Journal of Communication, 11 (21), 137-157.

 

Gilmore, J., Sheets, P., and Rowling, C. M. (2016). Make no exception, save one: American exceptionalism and its culmination in the age of Obama. Communication Monographs. 83 (4), 505-520.

 

Rowling, C. M., Gilmore, J., and Sheets, P. (2015). When threats are internal: Cascading frames, national identity, and the U.S. war in Afghanistan. International Journal of Press/Politics, 20 (4), 478-497.

 

Gilmore, J. (2015). American exceptionalism in the American mind: Presidential discourse, national identity and U.S. public opinion. Communication Studies, 66(3), 301-320 (Selected as the 2016 Communication Studies Article of the Year presented by the Central States Communication Association).

 

Gilmore, J. (2014). Translating American exceptionalism: Presidential discourse about the United States in comparative perspective. International Journal of Communication, 9, 22.

 

Gilmore, J., Meeks, L. & Domke, D. (2013). Why do (we think) they hate us?: National identity, news content and attributions of blame. International Journal of Communication, 7, 21.

 

Gilmore, J. (2012). Ditching the pack: Digital media in the 2010 Brazilian congressional campaigns. New Media and Society, 14(4), 617-633.

Book Chapters

Gilmore, J., & Howard, P. N. (2014). Digital media use and sophistication in the 2010 national elections in Brazil, in B. Grofman and A. Treschel, The Internet and Democracy in Global Perspective: Voters, Candidates, Parties, and Social Movements, Springer-Verlag.

 

Gastil, J., Knobloch, K., and Gilmore, J. (2017). The internal dynamics and sociopolitical power of public deliberation in groups. In K. Kenski and K. Hall Jamieson (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Political Communication, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

 

 

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