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GunCulture 16 - 11 Apr 2010 - Main.JuliaS
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"Then came, Oscar, the time of the guns.
And there was no land for a man, no land for a country,
| | Introduction
[Guns remain an enigmatic symbol in America society - an emblem of [liberty, independence, power, strength, masculinity, fear, oppression, conquest]. America's relationship with its guns today is a... How did it get to be that way?] | |
< < | My research project is based on the simple inquiry: how were guns regulated in the Colonial America? It is a question that is (relatively) easy to answer using primary sources; the who, what, where, when and how of early American gun regulation can be read right from the statutes. But the ease of the inquiry belies the magnitude of its implications. The Colonial statutes tell a story of fear and domination - a fragile and paranoid population of foreigners, trying desperately to exclude, suppress and subjugate every other they encountered. Firearm regulation provides a clear example of the modalities of power and violence that enabled the colonialist project. | > > | My research project is based on the simple inquiry: how were guns regulated in Colonial America? It is a question that is (relatively) easy to answer using primary sources; the who, what, where, when and how of early American gun regulation can be read right from the statutes. But the ease of the inquiry belies the magnitude of its implications. The Colonial statutes tell a story of fear and domination - a fragile and paranoid population of foreigners, trying desperately to exclude, suppress and subjugate every other group they encountered. Firearm regulation provides a clear example of the modalities of power and violence that enabled the colonialist project. | | |
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Revision 16 | r16 - 11 Apr 2010 - 15:08:46 - JuliaS |
Revision 15 | r15 - 11 Apr 2010 - 09:39:53 - JuliaS |
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