Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

The Lives of Guns Jonathan Obert (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Amherst College)

The Lives of Guns By Jonathan Obert (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Amherst College)

The Lives of Guns by Jonathan Obert (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Amherst College)


$51.99
Condition - New
Only 2 left

Summary

By focusing on the technology of the gun, rather than the people who wield or defend them, The Lives of Guns explores guns as political actors in American culture, ultimately offering something new and different to a complex and emotion-laden debate.

The Lives of Guns Summary

The Lives of Guns by Jonathan Obert (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Amherst College)

Guns have never before been as important in American culture as they are at this moment. Most contemporary conversations on guns focus on either the gun as a tool used in mass killings or a right to be fiercely defended, with most debates deadlocking on the ultimate role of humans in causing gun violence-that, as the cliche goes, Guns don't kill people; people kill people. And yet for all this attention, too much of the discussions on gun violence and gun control take the gun as passive object, ignoring the changing effects, and the very agency, that guns may deploy as politicized objects. The Lives of Guns offers a new and compelling way of thinking about the role of the gun in our social and political lives. In gathering ideas from science studies, law, sociology, and politics, each chapter turns the stale, standard gun conversations around by investigating the gun as a technology and thus as an object with its own power and agency. In approaching guns from a tech perspective, down to the very science of how they are created and how they fire, The Lives of Guns takes up a number of questions, such as: How does the presence of these specific objects shape civic ideology? What does it mean to develop and care for gun and gun accessories technology? What do guns mean to those who build them versus those who fight for-and against-them? What could happen when drone technology meets gun technology? In bringing together a great breadth of perspectives from leading lawyers, political scientists, and historians, The Lives of Guns promises to move the gun debate forward by opening up new ways of thinking about these issues, ultimately broadening our conception of what counts as an issue in these debates.

The Lives of Guns Reviews

For those frustrated with the terms of the contemporary US gun debate, this book provides respite beyond the binary thinking of guns kill people/people kill people. Spanning sites as diverse as concealed carried guns, police firearms, military drones, and hollow-point bullets to unravel the social life of guns, the essays are at turns politically pressing, theoretically illuminating, historically grippingand often up-close and personal. The volume is a must-read for anyone in search of a fresh vocabulary for understanding how guns transform ourselves and the social settings in which we move. * Jennifer Carlson, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Arizona, and author of Citizen-Protectors: The Everyday Politics of Guns in an Age of Decline *
The Lives of Guns is a theoretical book with tremendous practical relevance. It centers guns and gun paraphernalia in the production of violence and culture in the US. The meticulous factual details and conceptual insights herein will inspire new, probably more effective, methods for addressing the social ill of gun violence. Lawyers, activists, police, public health workers, and others will benefit from learning how particular kinds of ballistic weapons and their accessories shape both particular settings and particular actions taken by gun users, manufacturers, and sellers. * Heidi Li Feldman, Professor of Law, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Georgetown University Law Center *
This book does something remarkable: it strikes out in a new direction on the gun issue. Guns and similar devices that result in destruction arent just passive devices or simple tools, say the authors; guns have a moral agency, aside and apart from their human handlers, that reaches from interpersonal relations to the authority of the state. The new thinking reflected in this volume will be a welcome addition to serious writing on the role of guns in America. * Robert J. Spitzer, Distinguished Service Professor, Political Science, SUNY Cortland and author of Guns Across America: Reconciling Gun Rules and Rights *

About Jonathan Obert (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Amherst College)

Jonathan Obert is Assistant Professor of Politics at Amherst College. Andrew Poe is Assistant Professor of Political Theory at Amherst College. Austin Sarat is Associate Dean of the Faculty and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College and Hugo L. Black Visiting Senior Scholar at the University of Alabama School of Law. He is the author or editor of more than 90 books

Table of Contents

An IntroductionJonathan Obert, Andrew Poe, Austin SaratSection I: The Political Life of GunsChapter I: Mobile Sovereigns: Agency Panic and Gun Ownership>Elizabeth AnkerChapter II: Andrew PoeChapter III: Timothy LukeSection II: The Social Life of GunsChapter IV: Heather HayesChapter V: Joanna BourkeChapter VI: Franklin ZimringSection II: The Private Life of GunsChapter VII: David YanameChapter VIII: Harel ShapiraIndex

Additional information

NPB9780190842925
9780190842925
019084292X
The Lives of Guns by Jonathan Obert (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Amherst College)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2018-10-18
232
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - The Lives of Guns