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Calvin R. Coker
Calvin R. Coker
Assistant Professor, University of Louisville
Verified email at louisville.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
She’s hot, for a politician: The impact of objectifying commentary on perceived credibility of female candidates
ME Funk, CR Coker
Communication Studies 67 (4), 455-473, 2016
422016
Tweeting presidential primary debates: Debate processing through motivated Twitter instruction
FJ Jennings, CR Coker, MS McKinney, BR Warner
American Behavioral Scientist 61 (4), 455-474, 2017
282017
Comic agonism in the 2016 campaign: A study of Iowa Caucus rallies
BR Warner, R Galarza, CR Coker, P Tschirhart, S Hoeun, FJ Jennings, ...
American Behavioral Scientist 63 (7), 836-855, 2019
172019
Which ingroup, when? Effects of gender, partisanship, veteran status, and evaluator identities on candidate evaluations
MM Hardy, CR Coker, ME Funk, BR Warner
Communication Quarterly 67 (2), 199-220, 2019
172019
From exemptions to censorship: religious liberty and victimhood in Obergefell v. Hodges
CR Coker
Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 15 (1), 35-52, 2018
172018
The political is personal: Analyzing the presidential primary debate performances of Hillary Clinton and Michele Bachmann
MM Greenwood, CR Coker
Argumentation and Advocacy 52 (3), 165-180, 2016
142016
A multimedia analysis of persuasion in the 2016 presidential election: Comparing the unique and complementary effects of political comedy and political advertising
BR Warner, FJ Jennings, JC Bramlett, CR Coker, JL Reed, JP Bolton
Mass Communication and Society 21 (6), 720-741, 2018
122018
‘I just don’t think she has a presidential look:’the influence of sexism on candidate image
FJ Jennings, CR Coker
Information, Communication & Society 23 (9), 1353-1367, 2020
112020
Harriet Tubman, women on 20s, and intersectionality: Public memory and the redesign of US currency
CR Coker
Southern Communication Journal 82 (4), 239-249, 2017
112017
Murder, miscarriage, and women’s choice: Prudence in the Colorado personhood debate
CR Coker
Western Journal of Communication 81 (3), 300-319, 2017
92017
Absurdity in the statehouse: Burlesque legislation and the politics of rejection
CR Coker
Communication Quarterly 68 (1), 94-113, 2020
82020
Recasting the founding fathers: The Tea Party movement, neoliberalism, and American myth
C Coker
Speaker & Gavel 54 (1), 3, 2017
62017
Replacing Notorious: Barret, Ginsburg, and Postfeminist Positioning
CR Coker
Rhetoric and Public Affairs 26 (1), 101-130, 2023
32023
“This is a patriotism check”: Political economy, corruption, and duty to America in the 2020 primary debates
CR Coker, JL Reed
Argumentation and Advocacy 57 (3-4), 200-217, 2021
32021
Romney, Obama, and the 47%: gaffes and representative anecdotes in the 2012 presidential campaign
C Coker
Argumentation and Advocacy 53 (4), 327-343, 2017
32017
“Do you think this isn’t happening?” Rhetorical laundering and the federal hearings over Planned Parenthood
C Coker
Women & Language 46 (1), 225-254, 2023
22023
“With Facebook, you have a voice:” Neoliberalism and Activism in Mark Zuckerberg’s Georgetown Address
C Coker, R Corso-Gonzales
Journal of Contemporary Rhetoric 11 (1/2), 1-15, 2021
22021
Late Night with Donald Trump: An Exploration of the Combined Effects of Political Comedy and Po liti cal Advertising
FJ Jennings, CR Coker, JC Bramlett, JL Reed, JP Bolton
An Unprecedented Election: Media, Communication, and the Electorate in the …, 2018
22018
A handmaid’s tale: Amy Coney Barrett, originalism, and the specter of religion
CR Coker, JL Reed
Communication and Democracy 57 (2), 153-177, 2023
12023
On (not) seeing the chicken: Perdue, animal welfare, and the failure of transparency
CR Coker, RA Coker
Communication Quarterly, 2022
12022
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