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Shooters: Myths and Realities of America's Gun Cultures
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- ISBN-100195306449
- ISBN-13978-0195306446
- PublisherOxford University Press
- Publication dateDecember 8, 2005
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions9.02 x 0.7 x 6.26 inches
- Print length240 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Interesting and accessible to general readers.... Highly recommended."--Choice
"A fascinating look into the world(s) of gun enthusiasm that puts real, human faces on a gun debate dominated by antiseptic statistics and abstract principles. After reading Shooters, youll wonder why no one has done such a study before."--Reason
"Well-written and can be easily grasped by the average reader, yet it is meticulously documented to satisfy the questioning academic... A much-needed study about who firearms owners really are."--ESPN Outdoors
About the Author
Abigail Kohn currently works for a management and technology consulting firm in Washington D.C. She has published articles in Reason Magazine as well as a number of academic journals.
Product details
- Publisher : Oxford University Press (December 8, 2005)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0195306449
- ISBN-13 : 978-0195306446
- Item Weight : 12.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 9.02 x 0.7 x 6.26 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,057,543 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,277 in Military History (Books)
- #2,671 in Criminology (Books)
- #4,038 in Conventional Weapons & Warfare History (Books)
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Her book was published in December 2005, but I only ran across it because some folks were touting More Guns, Less Crime. Based on the Amazon reviews I had a feeling I already knew what Lott's book was going to say, and Shooters was one of their alternate suggestions. I disregarded the peach schnapps jokes that were running through my head and sent for a copy.
Kohn sought to define what owning guns means to American gun owners. Any city would have had quirks, but I have to admit that San Francisco seemed like an outlier of a place for a study of American gun culture. I'm relatively new to guns myself, but in MD and PA I know a lot of guys that hunt and frequent gun ranges, and even some that shoot paintball. But I had no idea that Cowboy Action Shooting and SASS even existed - and I've never met anyone that calls himself, or herself, a shooter. But America is a big place, and she started near her campus at U Cal SF.
As I come away from the book, I feel that I learned some interesting history and was exposed to many new ideas, which reflects well on the book. But I also feel that the book was actually less balanced than the dispassionate anthropological tone would indicate. Kohn immersed herself in gun culture - and liked it. She made friends and though the weapons still scare her a bit, she found the shooting challenging and exciting. Through Kohn, these SF shooters come across as the sort of people you'd want to meet and have fun with on vacation, and in many ways she seems to have become one of them. That isn't a bad thing, but I don't really see her in the white lab coat.
Towards the end, Kohn switched gears fairly quickly from observer to political adviser and peacemaker, and while I think she tried very hard to be practical, it is very, very hard to get past the intractable positions on each side. For example, Gun Control Australia, where Kohn is now researching gun culture, writes, "Kohn is trying to trick the public into believing that American shooters are taking the high moral ground by purchasing, and practicing to use guns. This is a trick and a trick which should be condemned."
But Shooters gets a more positive review at the TotalDrek blog, "What makes the book truly useful, however, are her remarks about her fellow academics, as well as anti-gun liberals generally. Seen through her eyes, many of the arguments these people make seem hysterical and ridiculous, born out of ignorance and a lack of thought. This is not to say that gun owners get a thorough white-washing, but rather only that she uses a book likely to be read primarily by academic audiences to make it clear why those same academics are sometimes seen as irrational lunatics."
The only thing I strongly disagree with is the ending, which calls for the criminalization of private gun transfers in lieu of "professional transfers" for a "nominal fee." Clearly Abagail has never encountered the gun dealers that charge fifty to a hundred dollars for the BS NICS paperwork. And if the paperwork is mandatory, you can bet prices will rise. Just look at class 3/ NFA items transfers. The CHEAPEST I've paid is 50 dollars per. But I digress.
Good book, it's nice for a liberal to see the light as I myself am neither liberal nor conservative but parts of both. I often say education of an issue will show the true nature of it, and this book will educate people who're presumably not into guns such as gun-debate-illiterate liberals and give them an objective view of the entire subject. For gun owners, it will offer a reasonable argument towards sensible gun control (yes, I can't believe I said it either), sensible gun control being things like felons and children not owning guns, and straw purchasers being sent to jail, basically things that are already illegal. Her conclusion is also a good one, though I disagree with the private transfers part strongly.
For that to come close to working, there'd have to be no central NICS check-in for "professional" transfers. I'm sorry, but you just don't know where the information your NICS check goes to. Tin Foil hat off.
As to the ideas contained in the book for advancing the entire gun debate, I think anti-gun liberals would have to get their heads out of their collective asses and look at guns and gun control objectively, and show proof of this educated stance by LAYING OFF irrational, emotionally driven gun control for the next 10-20 years. IF that somehow happened (which it won't), then perhaps us gun owners can deal with a theoretically sensible gun control.
Will that happen? Of course not. Both parties in our corrupt two-party system in america are emotionally driven about certain topics, and liberals will never stop trying to tread all over the rights of gun owners. Obama might have, for a moment, but that's just because he wants a 2nd term. Mark my words... just look at his voting record.



