Setup, as I understand things so far:
One way to think about where the spin of a quantum field comes from is that it is a consequence of the ways that different types of fields transform under Lorentz transformations.
The generator of a Lorentz transformation for a Dirac spinor field $\Psi$ is $S^{a b}=\frac 1 2 [\gamma^a, \gamma^b]$ (I use roman letters for the antisymmetric indices representing the rotation direction, and greek ones for the orientation of the field. Signature is $(+,-,-,-)$.)
For a vector field like $A^{\mu}$, it is $(M^{a b})^{\nu}_{\mu}=\frac 1 4 ( \eta^{a}_{\mu} \eta^{b \nu} - \eta^{b}_{\mu} \eta^{a \nu})$
For a tensor field like $g^{\mu \nu}$, it is two copies of $M$: $(M^{ab})^{\alpha}_{\mu} \otimes I+I \otimes (M^{ab})^{\beta}_{\nu}$
As one should expect, there is clearly a structure to these representations of increasing spin.
Now, although it isn't normally done, one could use the Clifford algebra relation:
$\{ \gamma^a, \gamma^b\}=2\eta^{a b}$
to express all of these generators in terms of increasingly complex products of gamma matrices.
Okay, with all that setup, my question is stated simply:
Is there a general formula that one can derive that will give the $n/2$ spin representation in terms of the appropriate gamma matrix combination?
As a particular example, what does a representation for a spin-3/2 field look like, as one might find in a supersymmetric theory?