Guns have never been as prevalent in American culture as they are at this moment. Most contemporary conversations on guns either highlight the gun as just a tool used in mass killings or a right to be fiercely defended; eventually, whatever progress these debates foster in the public conversation tend to halt altogether once the old cliché, "guns don't kill people; people kill people" is trotted out. These gun control and gun violence discussions take the gun as passive object, ignoring the changing effects, and the very agency, that guns may deploy as politicized objects. What happens if we reset the conversation and admit that guns, and not the people behind them, kill people?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 law, science studies, sociology, and politics, each chapter turns the stale, standard gun conversations around by investigating the gun as an object with agency. In approaching guns from a technological 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 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 fresh 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 and broadening the scope of these perennial debates.

Page Count:
232

|

Publication Date:
2018-01-01

Public Policy

Community Tags

Similar Books

The Wealth and Poverty of Cities: Why Nations Matter
It's a Setup: Fathering from the Social and Economic Margins
Social Protection under Authoritarianism: Health Politics and Policy in China
Populism and Trade: The Challenge to the Global Trading System
Between Power and Irrelevance: The Future of Transnational NGOs
Disorienting Neoliberalism: Global Justice and the Outer Limit of Freedom
Transforming Everything?: Evaluating Broadband's Impacts Across Policy Areas
Robert Triffin: A Life (Oxford Studies in the History of Economics)
Climate Change and the Nation State: The Case for Nationalism in a Warming World
How Policy Shapes Politics: Rights, Courts, Litigation, and the Struggle Over Injury Compensation (Studies in Postwar American Political Development)
Working with the Grain: Integrating Governance and Growth in Development Strategies
The World Heroin Market: Can Supply Be Cut? (Studies in Crime and Public Policy)
Locked Out: Felon Disenfranchisement and American Democracy (Studies in Crime and Public Policy)
Where There is No Government: Enforcing Property Rights in Common Law Africa
One Child: Do We Have a Right to More?