Description: Loaded by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz A provocative, timely, and deeply-researched history of gun culture and how it reflects race and power in the United States FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description "Roxanne Dunbar-Ortizs Loaded is like a blast of fresh air. She is no fan of guns or of our absurdly permissive laws surrounding them. But she does not merely take the liberal side of the familiar debate."--Adam Hochschild, The New York Review of Books"If . . . anyone at all really wants to get to the root causes of gun violence in America, they will need to start by coming to terms with even a fraction of what Loaded proposes."-Los Angeles Review of Books"Her analysis, erudite and unrelenting, exposes blind spots not just among conservatives, but, crucially, among liberals as well. . . . As a portrait of the deepest structures of American violence, Loaded is an indispensable book."-The New RepublicLoaded: A Disarming History of the Second Amendment, is a deeply researched-and deeply disturbing-history of guns and gun laws in the United States, from the original colonization of the country to the present. As historian and educator Dunbar-Ortiz explains, in order to understand the current obstacles to gun control, we must understand the history of U.S. guns, from their role in the "settling of America" and the early formation of the new nation, and continuing up to the present.Praise for Loaded:"Dunbar-Ortizs argument will be disturbing and unfamiliar to most readers, but her evidence is significant and should not be ignored."-Publishers Weekly" . . . gun love is as American as apple pie-and that those guns have often been in the hands of a powerful white majority to subjugate minority natives, slaves, or others who might stand in the way of the broadest definition of Manifest Destiny."-Kirkus Reviews"Trigger warning! This is a superb and subtle book, not an intellectual safe space for confirming your preconceptions-whatever those might be-but rather a deeply necessary provocation."-Christian Parenti, author of Lockdown America: Police and Prisons in the Age of Crisis Author Biography Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz grew up in rural Oklahoma, the daughter of a tenant farmer and part-Indian mother. She has been active in the international Indigenous movement for more than four decades and is known for her lifelong commitment to national and international social justice issues. After receiving her PhD in history at the University of California at Los Angeles, she taught in the newly established Native American Studies Program at California State University, Hayward, and helped found the Departments of Ethnic Studies and Womens Studies. Her 1977 book The Great Sioux Nation was the fundamental document at the first international conference on Indigenous peoples of the Americas, held at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva. Dunbar-Ortiz is the author or editor of many books, including her acclaimed An Indigenous Peoples History of the United States. She is the recipient of the Cultural Freedom Prize for Lifetime Achievement by the Lannan Foundation, and she lives in San Francisco, CA. Table of Contents CONTENTSIntroduction: Gun LoveChapter 1: Historical ContextChapter 2: Savage WarChapter 3: Slave PatrolsChapter 4: Confederate Guerrillas to Outlaw IconsChapter 5: Myth of the HunterChapter 6: The Second Amendment as a CovenantChapter 7: Mass ShootingsChapter 8. White Nationalists, the Militia Movement, and Tea Party PatriotsChapter 9: Eluding and Resisting the Historical White Supremacy of the Second AmendmentConclusion: History is Not PastNotesIndexAbout the Author Review "Dunbar-Ortiz demonstrates that the violence sanctioned by the Second Amendment was a key factor in transforming America into a militaristic-capitalist powerhouse. . . . Dunbar-Ortizs unhealthy relationship with guns ended after about two years. Americas has lasted a lot longer, but in the wake of Stoneman Douglas, there might be reason, at last, for some very cautious optimism."--Kevin Canfield, San Francisco Chronicle"Theres a new book that just came out that lays out a provocative argument for getting rid of the Second Amendment in its entirety, and the book asserts that the NRA has become a white nationalist organization."--Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept"Dunbar-Ortizs subtle deconstructions of the various works which contributed to our misunderstandings of the Second Amendments roots are vitally required reading, especially in our current era of daily mass shootings and political inaction toward better gun control. The white supremacy that Dunbar-Ortiz exposes with surgical exactness is the true foundation of the America we know today."—Sezin Koehler, Wear Your Voice Magazine "Loaded recognizes the central truth about our gun culture: that the privileged place of guns in American law and society is the by-product of the racial and class violence that has marked our history from its beginnings."—Richard Slotkin, author of Gunfighter Nation: The Myth of the Frontier in Twentieth-Century America"From an eminent scholar comes this timely and urgent intervention on U.S. gun culture. Loaded is a high-impact assault on the idea that Second Amendment rights were ever intended for all Americans. A timely antidote to our national amnesia about the white supremacist and settler colonialist roots of the Second Amendment."—Caroline Light, author of Stand Your Ground: A History of Americas Love Affair with Lethal Self-Defense "Loaded unleashes a sweeping and unsettling history of gun laws in the United States, beginning with anti-Native militias and anti-Black slave patrols. From the roots of white men armed to forge the settler state, the Second Amendment evolved as a tool for protecting white, male property owners. Its a must read for anyone who wants to uncover the long fetch of contemporary Second Amendment battles."—Kelly Lytle Hernandez, City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles, 1771-1965 "Now, in Loaded, she widens her lens to propose that the addiction to violence characteristic of American domestic institutions also derives from the frontiersmans belief in solving problems by killing. Whether expressed in individual cruelty like the collection of scalps or group barbarism by settler colonialists calling themselves militias, violence has become an ever-widening theme of life in the United States."—Staughton Lynd, author of Class Conflict, Slavery, and the United States Constitution"For anyone who believes we need more than thoughts and prayers to address our national gun crisis, Loaded is required reading. Beyond the Second Amendment, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz presents essential arguments missing from public debate. She forces readers to confront hard truths about the history of gun ownership, linking it to ongoing structures of settler colonialism, white supremacy, and racial capitalism. These are the open secrets of North American history. It is our anxious denial as much as our public policies that perpetrate violence. Only by coming to peace with our history can we ever be at peace with ourselves. This, for me, is the great lesson of Loaded."—Christina Heatherton, co-editor of Policing the Planet: Why the Policing Crisis Led to Black Lives Matter"Roxanne Dunbar-Oritzs Loaded argues U.S. history is quintessential gun history, and gun history is a history of racial terror and genocide. In other words, gun culture has never been about hunting. From crushing slave rebellions to Indigenous resistance, arming individual white settler men has always been the strategy for maintaining racial and class rule and for taking Indigenous land from the founding of the settler nation to the present. With clarity and urgency, Dunbar-Ortiz asks us not to think of our current moment as an exceptional era of mass-shootings. Instead, the very essence of the Second Amendment and the very project of U.S. settler democracy has required immense violence that began with Indigenous genocide and has expanded to endless war-making across the globe. This is a must read for any student of U.S. history."—Nick Estes, author of the forthcoming book Our History is the Future: Mni Wiconi and Native Liberation"With her usual unassailable rigor for detail and deep perspective, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz has potentially changed the debate about gun control in the United States. She meticulously and convincingly argues that U.S. gun culture—and the domestic and global massacres that have flowed from it—must be linked to an understanding of the ideological, historical, and practical role of guns in seizing Native American lands, black enslavement, and global imperialism. This is an essential work for policy-makers, street activists, and educators who are concerned with Second Amendment debates, #blacklivematters campaigns, global peace, and community-based security."—Clarence Lusane, Chairman and Professor of Political Science at Howard University and author of The Black History of the White House"Just what did the founding fathers intend the Second Amendment to do? Roxanne Dunbar-Ortizs answer to that question will unsettle liberal gun control advocates and open-carry aficionados alike. She follows the bloodstains of todays mass shootings back to the slave patrols and Indian Wars. There are no easy answers here, just the tough reckoning with history needed to navigate ourselves away from a future filled with more tragedies."—James Tracy, co-author of Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times"Gun violence, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz compellingly shows, is as U.S. American as apple pie. This important book peels back the painful and bloody layers of gun culture in the United States, and exposes their deep roots in the killing and dispossession of Native peoples, slavery and its aftermath, and U.S. empire-making. They are roots with which all who are concerned with matters of justice, basic decency, and the enduring tragedy of the U.S. love affair with guns must grapple."—Joseph Nevins, author of Dying to Live: A Story of U.S. Immigration in an Age of Global Apartheid"Loaded is a masterful synthesis of the historical origins of violence and militarism in the US. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz reminds us of what weve chosen to forget at our own peril: that from mass shootings to the routine deployment of violence against civilians by the US military, American violence flows from the normalization of racialized violence in our countrys founding history."—Johanna Fernández, Assistant Professor of History at Baruch College of the City University, and author of the forthcoming book, When the World Was Their Stage: A History of the Young Lords Party, 1968–1976"More than a history of the Second Amendment, this is a powerful history of the forging of white nationalism and empire through racist and naked violence. Explosively, it also shows how even liberal—and some leftist—pop culture icons have been complicit in the myth-making that has shrouded this potent historical truth."—Gerarld Horne, author of The Counter Revolution of 1776: Slave Resistance and the Origins of the USA"Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz has done an outstanding job of resituating the so-called gun debate into the context of race and settler colonialism. The result is that the discussion about individual gun ownership is no longer viewed as an abstract moral question and instead understood as standing at the very foundation of U.S. capitalism. My attention was captured from the first page."—Bill Fletcher, Jr., former president of TransAfrica Forum and syndicated writer"Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz provides a brilliant decolonization of the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution. She describes how the savage wars against Indigenous Peoples, slave patrols (which policing in the U.S. originates from), todays mass shootings, and the rise in white Nationalism are connected to the Second Amendment. This is a critically important work for all social science disciplines."—Michael Yellow Bird, professor and director of Tribal and Indigenous Peoples Studies at North Dakota State University"This explosive, ground-breaking book dispels the confusion and shatters the sanctimony that surrounds the Second Amendment, revealing the colonial, racist core of the right to bear arms. You simply cannot understand the United States and its disastrous gun-mania without the brilliant Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz as a guide."—Astra Taylor, author of The Peoples Platform: Taking Back Power and Culture in the Digital Age"There is no more interesting historian of the United States than Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. And with Loaded she has done it again, taking a topic about which so much has already been written, distilling it down, turning it inside out, and allowing us to see American history anew."—Walter Johnson, author of River of Dark Dreams: Slavery and Empire in the Mississippi Valleys Cotton Kingdom"Loaded is a compelling antidote to historical amnesia about the brutal origins of the United States unique gun culture. Dunbar-Ortiz draws on decades of historical scholarship to illuminate the practice of Native genocide while framing the Second Amendment as the grounds for a violence-based nationalism."—Caroline E. Light, "Public Books" Promotional Galleys availableNational TV & RADIO CAMPAIGN: C-SPAN Book TV, Democracy Now!, Tavis Smiley, NPR-Talk of the Nation, Alternative Radio, Pacifica Network stations/shows, Community and NPR affiliate radio stations around the U.S. PRINT CAMPAIGN: LA Times, NY Times, SF Chronicle, Atlantic Monthly, The Nation, New Republic, Wall St Journal, Chicago Tribune, and other major daily newspapers and magazines.Well send to the trades: PW, Kirkus, Library Journal and BooklistAuthor will write op-eds targeted to national newspapers.Will pursue first serial.ONLINE/SOCIAL MEDIA CAMPAIGN:Will pursue review/excerpts/opeds, etc. to Shelf Awareness, Salon, Slate, Christian Science Monitor, Huffington Post, Tomdispatch, Truthout, Truthdig, Counterpunch, CommonDreams, Z-Net and Alternet. Well promote it on City Lights Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, Tumblr, blog and web site, and on Wikipedia. Author is active on Twitter and Facebook.LIBRARY MARKETING:Baker & Taylor super annotationACADEMIC MARKETING:Chronicle of Higher Education, Cultural Politics, Cultural Studies, Cultural Studies/Critical Methodologies, Fast Capitalism,In These Times, JAC: Journal of Advanced Composition, Journal of Urban and Cultural Studies, Logos: Journal of Modern Society and Culture, Nonsite,Situations, Social Identities, symploke, Theory, Culture & Society, Third Text, Thought & Action, Transformations, Works and Days Long Description "Roxanne Dunbar-Ortizs Loaded is like a blast of fresh air. She is no fan of guns or of our absurdly permissive laws surrounding them. But she does not merely take the liberal side of the familiar debate."--Adam Hochschild, The New York Review of Books "If . . . anyone at all really wants to get to the root causes of gun violence in America, they will need to start by coming to terms with even a fraction of what Loaded proposes."--Los Angeles Review of Books "Her analysis, erudite and unrelenting, exposes blind spots not just among conservatives, but, crucially, among liberals as well. . . . As a portrait of the deepest structures of American violence, Loaded is an indispensable book."--The New Republic Loaded: A Disarming History of the Second Amendment, is a deeply researched--and deeply disturbing--history of guns and gun laws in the United States, from the original colonization of the country to the present. As historian and educator Dunbar-Ortiz explains, in order to understand the current obstacles to gun control, we must understand the history of U.S. guns, from their role in the "settling of America" and the early formation of the new nation, and continuing up to the present. Praise for Loaded: "Dunbar-Ortizs argument will be disturbing and unfamiliar to most readers, but her evidence is significant and should not be ignored."--Publishers Weekly " . . . gun love is as American as apple pie--and that those guns have often been in the hands of a powerful white majority to subjugate minority natives, slaves, or others who might stand in the way of the broadest definition of Manifest Destiny."--Kirkus Reviews "Trigger warning! This is a superb and subtle book, not an intellectual safe space for confirming your preconceptions--whatever those might be--but rather a deeply necessary provocation."--Christian Parenti, author of Lockdown America: Police and Prisons in the Age of Crisis Review Quote "Dunbar-Ortiz demonstrates that the violence sanctioned by the Second Amendment was a key factor in transforming America into a militaristic-capitalist powerhouse. . . . Dunbar-Ortizs unhealthy relationship with guns ended after about two years. Americas has lasted a lot longer, but in the wake of Stoneman Douglas, there might be reason, at last, for some very cautious optimism."--Kevin Canfield, San Francisco Chronicle "Theres a new book that just came out that lays out a provocative argument for getting rid of the Second Amendment in its entirety, and the book asserts that the NRA has become a white nationalist organization."--Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept "Dunbar-Ortizs subtle deconstructions of the various works which contributed to our misunderstandings of the Second Amendments roots are vitally required reading, especially in our current era of daily mass shootings and political inaction toward better gun control. The white supremacy that Dunbar-Ortiz exposes with surgical exactness is the true foundation of the America we know today."--Sezin Koehler, Wear Your Voice Magazine "Loaded recognizes the central truth about our gun culture: that the privileged place of guns in American law and society is the by-product of the racial and class violence that has marked our history from its beginnings."--Richard Slotkin, author of Gunfighter Nation: The Myth of the Frontier in Twentieth-Century America "From an eminent scholar comes this timely and urgent intervention on U.S. gun culture. Loaded is a high-impact assault on the idea that Second Amendment rights were ever intended for all Americans. A timely antidote to our national amnesia about the white supremacist and settler colonialist roots of the Second Amendment."--Caroline Light, author of Stand Your Ground: A History of Americas Love Affair with Lethal Self-Defense "Loaded unleashes a sweeping and unsettling history of gun laws in the United States, beginning with anti-Native militias and anti-Black slave patrols. From the roots of white men armed to forge the settler state, the Second Amendment evolved as a tool for protecting white, male property owners. Its a must read for anyone who wants to uncover the long fetch of contemporary Second Amendment battles."--Kelly Lytle Hernandez, City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles, 1771-1965 "Now, in Loaded, she widens her lens to propose that the addiction to violence characteristic of American domestic institutions also derives from the frontiersmans belief in solving problems by killing. Whether expressed in individual cruelty like the collection of scalps or group barbarism by settler colonialists calling themselves militias, violence has become an ever-widening theme of life in the United States."--Staughton Lynd, author of Class Conflict, Slavery, and the United States Constitution "For anyone who believes we need more than thoughts and prayers to address our national gun crisis, Loaded is required reading. Beyond the Second Amendment, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz presents essential arguments missing from public debate. She forces readers to confront hard truths about the history of gun ownership, linking it to ongoing structures of settler colonialism, white supremacy, and racial capitalism. These are the open secrets of North American history. It is our anxious denial as much as our public policies that perpetrate violence. Only by coming to peace with our history can we ever be at peace with ourselves. This, for me, is the great lesson of Loaded."--Christina Heatherton, co-editor of Policing the Planet: Why the Policing Crisis Led to Black Lives Matter "Roxanne Dunbar-Oritzs Loaded argues U.S. history is quintessential gun history, and gun history is a history of racial terror and genocide. In other words, gun culture has never been about hunting. From crushing slave rebellions to Indigenous resistance, arming individual white settler men has always been the strategy for maintaining racial and class rule and for taking Indigenous land from the founding of the settler nation to the present. With clarity and urgency, Dunbar-Ortiz asks us not to think of our current moment as an exceptional era of mass-shootings. Instead, the very essence of the Second Amendment and the very project of U.S. settler democracy has required immense violence that began with Indigenous genocide and has expanded to endless war-making across the globe. This is a must read for any student of U.S. history."--Nick Estes, author of the forthcoming book Our History is the Future: Mni Wiconi and Native Liberation "With her usual unassailable rigor for detail and deep perspective, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz has potentially changed the debate about gun control in the United States. She meticulously and convincingly argues that U.S. gun culture--and the domestic and global massacres that have flowed from it--must be linked to an understanding of the ideological, historical, and practical role of guns in seizing Native American lands, black enslavement, and global imperialism. This is an essential work for policy-makers, street activists, and educators who are concerned with Second Amendment debates, #blacklivematters campaigns, global peace, and community-based security."--Clarence Lusane, Chairman and Professor of Political Science at Howard University and author of The Black History of the White House "Just what did the founding fathers intend the Second Amendment to do? Roxanne Dunbar-Ortizs answer to that question will unsettle liberal gun control advocates and open-carry aficionados alike. She follows the bloodstains of todays mass shootings back to the slave patrols and Indian Wars. There are no easy answers here, just the tough reckoning with history needed to navigate ourselves away from a future filled with more tragedies."--James Tracy, co-author of Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times "Gun violence, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz compellingly shows, is as U.S. American as apple pie. This important book peels back the painful and bloody layers of gun culture in the United States, and exposes their deep roots in the killing and dispossession of Native peoples, slavery and its aftermath, and U.S. empire-making. They are roots with which all who are concerned with matters of justice, basic decency, and the enduring tragedy of the U.S. love affair with guns must grapple."--Joseph Nevins, author of Dying to Live: A Story of U.S. Immigration in an Age of Global Apartheid "Loaded is a masterful synthesis of the historical origins of violence and militarism in the US. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz reminds us of what weve chosen to forget at our own peril: that from mass shootings to the routine deployment of violence against civilians by the US military, American violence flows from the normalization of racialized violence in our countrys founding history."--Johanna Fern Competing Titles The Gunning of America: Business and the Making of American Gun Culture Pamela Haag 9780465048953 29.99 Basic Books 4/19/2016 The Second Amendment: A Biography Michael Waldman 9781476747453 16.00 Simon & Schuster 05/2015 The Way of the Gun: A Bloody Journey into the World of Firearms Iain Overton 9780062346070 26.99 Harper 03/2016 Description for Sales People Few arguments provoke debate more fiercely than those aimed at gun control in the US, and this book will become essential to that discussion. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz strikes a nerve by not only challenging the idea of gun ownership as a sacred right essential to American identity, she confronts the racist origins of the 2nd Amendment. Dunbar-Ortiz presents the stories of African Americans and Native Americans whose freedom has been thwarted since the inception of the amendment. The author probes why Americans, like herself for a time, have long had an affinity for firearms, and links this history to the rise of white nationalism in the U.S. The authors recent book "An Indigenous Peoples History of the United States" was a critical and commercial success, selling 50,000 copies since publication in 2015. As a "peoples history of the Second Amendment," LOADED will appeal to Howard Zinns more broad, left-leaning, social justice readership. Details ISBN0872867234 Author Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz Publisher City Lights Books Series City Lights Open Media Year 2018 ISBN-10 0872867234 ISBN-13 9780872867239 Format Paperback Imprint City Lights Books Subtitle A Disarming History of the Second Amendment Country of Publication United States Media Book Pages 236 DEWEY 323.4/3 Short Title Loaded Language English Place of Publication Monroe, OR Publication Date 2018-03-08 NZ Release Date 2018-03-08 US Release Date 2018-03-08 UK Release Date 2018-03-08 Audience General AU Release Date 2018-01-22 Illustrations Illustrations We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:138291297;
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ISBN-13: 9780872867239
Book Title: Loaded
Number of Pages: 236 Pages
Publication Name: Loaded: a Disarming History of the Second Amendment
Language: English
Publisher: City Lights Books
Item Height: 177 mm
Subject: Social Sciences, History
Publication Year: 2018
Type: Textbook
Subject Area: Economic Sociology, Sexual Abuse, Civil Service
Author: Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
Item Width: 127 mm
Format: Paperback