Armed intimacy: in pursuit of security and self with gun rights activists in Southern California
dc.contributor.advisor
High, Casey
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dc.contributor.advisor
Spencer, Jonathan
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dc.contributor.author
Anderson, Joseph Jonathan
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
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dc.date.accessioned
2020-09-30T11:58:35Z
dc.date.available
2020-09-30T11:58:35Z
dc.date.issued
2020-08-06
dc.description.abstract
This thesis explores how a desire to own guns is constituted within locally situated human
lives in an attempt to explain why firearms have become such important objects of
contestation in the United States. I spent a year conducting ethnographic fieldwork in
Southern California with two organisations - the San Diego County Gun Owners and a pro-LGBTQ+ firearms advocacy group called the Pink Pistols. These activist organisations hold
monthly meetings, regular social events, fundraisers, and encourage direct campaigning.
Arriving in the field just two months prior to the 2016 United States general election, I found
the members of these organisations actively engaged in public debate and recruitment. I
accompanied gun owners to shooting ranges across the county, learned to shoot, travelled
with them to defensive handgun courses and gun-rights conventions, and engaged in long
conversations about why firearms have come to occupy such a central role in their lives. I
examine how people understand their use of firearms, particularly for the reason of self-defence, to show how the terms of a national debate about guns can come to feed into the
subjective embodied experiences that people have of their gender identity, their sense of
belonging in a country, and their understanding of existential safety. Important to this is the
ethnographer’s own journey of learning to feel comfortable around firearms and with his
interlocutors. Throughout the thesis I engage with anthropological debates on embodiment
and technology; how contemporary gendered and national identities are shaped and
reformed in a dialogue between a remembered history and subjectively experienced present;
and the limits and potential for an anthropological gaze that reserves an important place for
empathy in the fieldwork process, even if this empathy is at times hard to give.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/37273
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/559
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.rights.embargodate
2021-08-06
dc.subject
gun rights
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dc.subject
gun ownership
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dc.subject
United States
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dc.subject
anthropology
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dc.subject
embodiment
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dc.subject
gender
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dc.subject
ethics
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dc.subject
Nationalism
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dc.subject
America
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dc.subject
firearms
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dc.subject
gun rights activists
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dc.subject
Southern California
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dc.subject
California
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dc.title
Armed intimacy: in pursuit of security and self with gun rights activists in Southern California
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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dcterms.accessRights
Restricted Access
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