ABSTRACT

As cultural, social, political, and historical objects, guns are rich with complex and contested significance. What guns mean, why they matter, and what policies should be undertaken to regulate guns remain issues of vigorous scholarly and public debate.

Gun Studies offers fresh research and original perspectives on the contentious issue of firearms in public life. Comprising global, interdisciplinary contributions, this insightful volume examines difficult and timely questions through the lens of:

  • Social practice
  • Marketing and commerce
  • Critical theory
  • Political conflict
  • Public policy
  • Criminology

Questions explored include the evolution of American gun culture from recreation to self-protection; the changing dynamics of the pro-gun and pro-regulation movements; the deeply personal role of guns as sources of both injury and security; and the relationship between gun-wielding individuals, the state, and social order in the United States and abroad. In addition to introducing new research, Gun Studies presents reflections by senior scholars on what has been learned over the decades and how gun-related research has influenced public policy and everyday conversations.

Offering provocative and often intimate perspectives on how guns influence individuals, social structures, and the state in both dramatic and nuanced ways, Gun Studies will appeal to students and researchers interested in fields such as sociology, political science, legal history, criminology, criminal justice, social policy, armaments industries, and violent crime. It will also appeal to policy makers and all others interested in and concerned about the use of guns.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

New approaches to research on guns

chapter 1|19 pages

The rise of self-defense in gun advertising

The American Rifleman, 1918–2017

chapter 2|24 pages

Semi-automatics for the people?

The marketing of a new kind of man

chapter 4|20 pages

Understanding the illicit gun market in Los Angeles

A review of the empirical evidence

chapter 5|22 pages

Consumers, culture, market systems and strategy

Integrating marketing research and firearms studies

chapter 6|19 pages

Fighting the Left and leading the Right

NRA politics and power through the 2016 elections

chapter 7|15 pages

Whatever happened to the ‘missing movement’?

Gun control politics over two decades of change

chapter 8|26 pages

What if we talked about gun control differently?

A framing experiment

chapter 9|19 pages

Gun control

An Australian perspective

chapter 10|15 pages

Prosthetic gods

On the semiotic and affective landscape of firearms in American politics

chapter 13|17 pages

Lawfully armed citizens and police

A proposal for reducing armed encounters with agents of the state

chapter 14|13 pages

‘The worst that humanity has to offer’

On looters and law-abiding citizens in a state of emergency

chapter 16|15 pages

Firearms and violence

chapter 17|21 pages

The effect of firearms on suicide

chapter 18|11 pages

Gun policy research

Personal reflections on public questions