Gun control and the Second Amendment
Dr Kevin Yuill (with Joe Street of Northumbria University) has edited a book entitled, The Second Amendment and Gun Control, Freedom, Fear, and the American Constitution (Routledge  2018). The collection of essays situates discussion about gun controls  within contemporary debates about citizenship, culture, philosophy and  foreign policy as well as in the more familiar terrain of politics and  history. It features experts on the Constitution as well as chapters  discussing the symbolic importance of Annie Oakley, the role of firearms  in race, and filmic representations of armed Hispanic girl gangs. It  asks about the morality of gun controls and of not imposing them.  Published in the spirit of open debate about contentious subjects, it is  finely balanced between those who favour more gun controls and those  who oppose them. Dr Yuill’s chapter - 'From Virtuous Armed Citizen to  "Cramped Little Risk-Fearing Man": The Meaning of Firearms in an  Insecure Era' – argues that the two sides of the debate are simply  alternative strategies to deal with existential insecurities. One side  seeks a policy solution of removing all weapons while the other employs  the individual strategy of packing a gun.

 
 
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