Description

Book Synopsis

A rhetorical study of the American political debate on gun violence and gun policy. Examines the role of public memory in shaping this discourse and its eventual policy outcomes.



Trade Review

“Written with passion, insight, and eloquence, After Gun Violence is a compelling exploration of a tragically American problem—regular, mass gun violence. Aligning himself with readers as a horrified witness to these deadly recurring events, Craig Rood balances outrage with perspective, weariness with resolve, sadness with hope that Americans may achieve mutual understanding on a topic that has produced mistrust and frustration. Rood respects the complexity of people’s different beliefs about guns while articulating a clear vision of a way forward. A stunning achievement.”

—Robert Asen,author of Democracy, Deliberation, and Education


“A thoughtful and sobering analysis of America’s inability to engage in serious deliberation about gun violence. Rood traces the way that past debates have created a sense that the problem is simply intractable and demonstrates the way recent efforts to deal with gun violence were crushed under the weight of past failures. Drawing on the long history of rhetoric, Rood is able not only to analyze the present difficulties but also to suggest productive ways to move these debates forward. The stakes for such a project have never been higher. Rood’s book should be required reading for any citizen wanting to engage in a real debate about the role of guns in American society.”

—Kendall R. Phillips,co-director, The Lender Center for Social Justice


“An empowering message of this book resides in the assurance that while we exist in this world that comes with its own meanings and past, we have the power within ourselves to change what language habits we use and pass down.”

—Amanda Pasierb Journal of Public Deliberation


“There could not be a more important time for a book like After Gun Violence—which connects the timely subjects of liberty, political discourse, and progress (or lack thereof). Although it was written with the specific intention of analyzing the gun debate through a rhetorical, academic lens, the lessons in After Gun Violence can be applied outside of the ivory tower and more broadly to issues beyond gun violence.”

—Peter Rentzepis World Medical and Health Policy


“Provides an instructive model for extending rhetorical interventions into the multifaceted impacts of gun violence, including police brutality, extremist vigilantism, urban violence, suicide, and domestic violence. . . . This framework invites rhetoricians, teachers, and community members to reflect on the recursive force of memory in the constructions of individual and collective identity, and it opens the door for further deliberative interventions into the material, emotional, and rhetorical tolls of political struggle.”

—Richard Branscomb Rhetoric Review



Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Deliberating Gun Violence

1 Deliberation and Memory

2 The Weight of the Past: Memory and the Second Amendment

3 The Fleeting Past: Memory and Our Obligations to the Dead

4 The Implicit Past: Memory and Racism

5 Conclusions for Moving Beyond Gridlock

Epilogue

Notes

Bibliography

Index

After Gun Violence Deliberation and Memory in an

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A Hardback by Craig Rood

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    View other formats and editions of After Gun Violence Deliberation and Memory in an by Craig Rood

    Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
    Publication Date: 04/06/2019
    ISBN13: 9780271083834, 978-0271083834
    ISBN10: 0271083832

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    A rhetorical study of the American political debate on gun violence and gun policy. Examines the role of public memory in shaping this discourse and its eventual policy outcomes.



    Trade Review

    “Written with passion, insight, and eloquence, After Gun Violence is a compelling exploration of a tragically American problem—regular, mass gun violence. Aligning himself with readers as a horrified witness to these deadly recurring events, Craig Rood balances outrage with perspective, weariness with resolve, sadness with hope that Americans may achieve mutual understanding on a topic that has produced mistrust and frustration. Rood respects the complexity of people’s different beliefs about guns while articulating a clear vision of a way forward. A stunning achievement.”

    —Robert Asen,author of Democracy, Deliberation, and Education


    “A thoughtful and sobering analysis of America’s inability to engage in serious deliberation about gun violence. Rood traces the way that past debates have created a sense that the problem is simply intractable and demonstrates the way recent efforts to deal with gun violence were crushed under the weight of past failures. Drawing on the long history of rhetoric, Rood is able not only to analyze the present difficulties but also to suggest productive ways to move these debates forward. The stakes for such a project have never been higher. Rood’s book should be required reading for any citizen wanting to engage in a real debate about the role of guns in American society.”

    —Kendall R. Phillips,co-director, The Lender Center for Social Justice


    “An empowering message of this book resides in the assurance that while we exist in this world that comes with its own meanings and past, we have the power within ourselves to change what language habits we use and pass down.”

    —Amanda Pasierb Journal of Public Deliberation


    “There could not be a more important time for a book like After Gun Violence—which connects the timely subjects of liberty, political discourse, and progress (or lack thereof). Although it was written with the specific intention of analyzing the gun debate through a rhetorical, academic lens, the lessons in After Gun Violence can be applied outside of the ivory tower and more broadly to issues beyond gun violence.”

    —Peter Rentzepis World Medical and Health Policy


    “Provides an instructive model for extending rhetorical interventions into the multifaceted impacts of gun violence, including police brutality, extremist vigilantism, urban violence, suicide, and domestic violence. . . . This framework invites rhetoricians, teachers, and community members to reflect on the recursive force of memory in the constructions of individual and collective identity, and it opens the door for further deliberative interventions into the material, emotional, and rhetorical tolls of political struggle.”

    —Richard Branscomb Rhetoric Review



    Table of Contents

    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction: Deliberating Gun Violence

    1 Deliberation and Memory

    2 The Weight of the Past: Memory and the Second Amendment

    3 The Fleeting Past: Memory and Our Obligations to the Dead

    4 The Implicit Past: Memory and Racism

    5 Conclusions for Moving Beyond Gridlock

    Epilogue

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

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