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Merchants of the Right

Gun Sellers and the Crisis of American Democracy

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An eye-opening portrait of the gun sellers who navigated the social turmoil leading up to the January 6 Capitol attack
Gun sellers sell more than just guns. They also sell politics. Merchants of the Right sheds light on the unparalleled surge in gun purchasing during one of the most dire moments in American history, revealing how conservative political culture was galvanized amid a once-in-a-century pandemic, racial unrest, and a U.S. presidential election that rocked the foundations of American democracy.
Drawing on a wealth of in-depth interviews with gun sellers across the United States, Jennifer Carlson takes readers to the front lines of the culture war over gun rights. Even though the majority of gun owners are conservative, new gun buyers are more likely to be liberal than existing gun owners. This posed a dilemma to gun sellers in the run-up to the 2020 presidential election: embrace these liberal customers as part of a new, perhaps post-partisan chapter in the American gun saga or double down on gun politics as conservative terrain. Carlson describes how gun sellers mobilized mainstays of modern conservative culture—armed individualism, conspiracism, and partisanship—as they navigated the uncertainty and chaos unfolding around them, asserting gun politics as conservative politics and reworking and even rejecting liberal democracy in the process.
Merchants of the Right offers crucial lessons about the dilemmas confronting us today, arguing that we must reckon with the everyday politics that divide us if we ever hope to restore American democracy to health.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 13, 2023
      University of Arizona sociologist Carlson (Policing the Second Amendment) offers an illuminating deep dive into how gun sellers navigated the “surging demand” for firearms brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic, civil unrest over the murder of George Floyd by police, and Donald Trump’s claims that the 2020 election was rigged. Of the 23 million guns sold in 2020, more than eight million were bought by first-time gun owners, many of whom “didn’t fit the mold of the ‘typical’ gun owner: a conservative, white, straight male who already owned guns.” But rather than embrace their new, more liberal, more diverse clientele, gun sellers “doubled down” on the conspiratorial thinking, anti-elitism, and commitment to “self-reliance, anti-statism, and individualism” that have made them, according to Carlson, avatars and proselytizers of conservative politics in America. She supports her case through interviews with gun sellers who believe Covid-19 “was made in a lab in China” and express disdain for their “panicked, naive, hysterical” new customers; astute analysis of legal, political, and public health matters; and close readings of “online gun news outlets.” Though Carlson’s overarching thesis occasionally gets lost in the shuffle, she packs the proceedings with intriguing insights and observations. It’s a fresh take on how guns and politics mix.

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  • English

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