Understanding America's Gun Culture

Author:   Craig Hovey ,  Lisa Fisher ,  Rachel Boaz ,  Garrison Allen Crews
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781498568142


Pages:   202
Publication Date:   13 September 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Understanding America's Gun Culture


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Craig Hovey ,  Lisa Fisher ,  Rachel Boaz ,  Garrison Allen Crews
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.10cm
Weight:   0.281kg
ISBN:  

9781498568142


ISBN 10:   1498568149
Pages:   202
Publication Date:   13 September 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

This ambitiously titled work, published in the context of high-profile mass shootings, contains eight chapters. . . Valuable contributions focus on the rhetoric surrounding gun ownership, the gun culture of law-abiding citizens, and a study on the profiles of mass shooters in school settings. At first glance, the book suffers from having two chapters on the same subject: reconciling Christian ethics and US gun ownership. However, the Christian ethics chapter, by Matt Stolick, is the standout chapter of the book. He writes an excellent overview of gun laws in relation to the gun industry, though the chapter would have been better placed toward the front of the book. Chapters on social violence and gender differences in Caribbean and German gun culture are interesting. . . Overall, this book contributes to the literature on gun culture. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE *


This ambitiously titled work, published in the context of high-profile mass shootings, contains eight chapters. . . Valuable contributions focus on the rhetoric surrounding gun ownership, the gun culture of law-abiding citizens, and a study on the profiles of mass shooters in school settings. At first glance, the book suffers from having two chapters on the same subject: reconciling Christian ethics and US gun ownership. However, the Christian ethics chapter, by Matt Stolick, is the standout chapter of the book. He writes an excellent overview of gun laws in relation to the gun industry, though the chapter would have been better placed toward the front of the book. Chapters on social violence and gender differences in Caribbean and German gun culture are interesting. . . Overall, this book contributes to the literature on gun culture. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE * Understanding America's Gun Culture is a thoughtful and insightful edited collection. This book will help to inject relevant and contemporary gun culture topics into any classroom, and provide meaningful substance for anyone interested in these weighty and controversial topics. -- Jim D. Taylor, Ohio University, Zanesville Understanding America's Gun Culture is an earnest reflection from a full range of perspectives on America's gun culture and its growing influence in the Caribbean and Europe. Its essays address thoughtfully the rhetorical strategies and moral justifications in the many-sided debate over the role of guns in American life. -- Randolph Roth, Ohio State University Many contributions to the fatally grid-locked and depressingly partisan U.S. gun debate generate more heat than light, serving only to further entrench the respective positions of advocates. This book, focusing instead upon the debate itself, provides a welcome and refreshing change. Drawing upon a wide range of social scientific, ethical, and philosophical perspectives, the various chapters comprising the collection seek to unpack and explore the much contested debate itself, what it means, how it works, and what it tells us about the contemporary U.S. This is essential reading for anyone interested in this vital aspect of U.S. law, politics, and culture and bold enough to relinquish the tired old cliches for the nuance and complexity of understanding a real world dilemma. -- Peter Squires, University of Brighton Many contributions to the fatally grid-locked and depressingly partisan U.S. gun debate generate more heat than light, serving only to further entrench the respective positions of advocates. This book, focusing instead upon the debate itself, provides a welcome and refreshing change. Drawing upon a wide range of social scientific, ethical, and philosophical perspectives, the various chapters comprising the collection seek to unpack and explore the much contested debate itself, what it means, how it works, and what it tells us about the contemporary U.S. This is essential reading for anyone interested in this vital aspect of U.S. law, politics, and culture and bold enough to relinquish the tired old cliches for the nuance and complexity of understanding a real world dilemma. -- Peter Squires, University of Brighton This edited volume is unique in its scope and contemplation of the role of firearms in society. With a wide range of expertise among the authors, this collection of essays offers something for anyone who is curious about the link between firearms and culture. -- Trent Steidley, University of Denver


This ambitiously titled work, published in the context of high-profile mass shootings, contains eight chapters. . . Valuable contributions focus on the rhetoric surrounding gun ownership, the gun culture of law-abiding citizens, and a study on the profiles of mass shooters in school settings. At first glance, the book suffers from having two chapters on the same subject: reconciling Christian ethics and US gun ownership. However, the Christian ethics chapter, by Matt Stolick, is the standout chapter of the book. He writes an excellent overview of gun laws in relation to the gun industry, though the chapter would have been better placed toward the front of the book. Chapters on social violence and gender differences in Caribbean and German gun culture are interesting. . . Overall, this book contributes to the literature on gun culture. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE * Understanding America's Gun Culture is a thoughtful and insightful edited collection. This book will help to inject relevant and contemporary gun culture topics into any classroom, and provide meaningful substance for anyone interested in these weighty and controversial topics. -- Jim D. Taylor, Ohio University, Zanesville Understanding America's Gun Culture is an earnest reflection from a full range of perspectives on America’s gun culture and its growing influence in the Caribbean and Europe. Its essays address thoughtfully the rhetorical strategies and moral justifications in the many-sided debate over the role of guns in American life. -- Randolph Roth, Ohio State University Many contributions to the fatally grid-locked and depressingly partisan U.S. gun debate generate more heat than light, serving only to further entrench the respective positions of advocates. This book, focusing instead upon the debate itself, provides a welcome and refreshing change. Drawing upon a wide range of social scientific, ethical, and philosophical perspectives, the various chapters comprising the collection seek to unpack and explore the much contested debate itself, what it means, how it works, and what it tells us about the contemporary U.S. This is essential reading for anyone interested in this vital aspect of U.S. law, politics, and culture and bold enough to relinquish the tired old clichés for the nuance and complexity of understanding a real world dilemma. -- Peter Squires, University of Brighton Many contributions to the fatally grid-locked and depressingly partisan U.S. gun debate generate more heat than light, serving only to further entrench the respective positions of advocates. This book, focusing instead upon the debate itself, provides a welcome and refreshing change. Drawing upon a wide range of social scientific, ethical, and philosophical perspectives, the various chapters comprising the collection seek to unpack and explore the much contested debate itself, what it means, how it works, and what it tells us about the contemporary U.S. This is essential reading for anyone interested in this vital aspect of U.S. law, politics, and culture and bold enough to relinquish the tired old clichés for the nuance and complexity of understanding a real world dilemma. -- Peter Squires, University of Brighton This edited volume is unique in its scope and contemplation of the role of firearms in society. With a wide range of expertise among the authors, this collection of essays offers something for anyone who is curious about the link between firearms and culture. -- Trent Steidley, University of Denver


Author Information

Craig Hovey is associate professor of religion at Ashland University and executive director of the Ashland Center for Nonviolence. Lisa Fisher worked in higher education for more than a decade and is now consulting director for a Washington, DC IT firm.

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