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From Gun Politics to Self-Defense Politics

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This article calls attention to a problematic binary produced by public debates surrounding gun rights and gun control—namely, that women must choose armed self-protection or no self-protection at all. I argue that both anti- and pro-gun discourses, drawing on and reproducing race and class privileges, use assumptions about women’s physical inferiority to further their agendas. I highlight how both sides have used guns as the proxy for self-defense and conclude by calling for a shift in public discourse to focus on the broader question of the right to self-defense rather than the narrower question of gun rights.
Title: From Gun Politics to Self-Defense Politics
Description:
This article calls attention to a problematic binary produced by public debates surrounding gun rights and gun control—namely, that women must choose armed self-protection or no self-protection at all.
I argue that both anti- and pro-gun discourses, drawing on and reproducing race and class privileges, use assumptions about women’s physical inferiority to further their agendas.
I highlight how both sides have used guns as the proxy for self-defense and conclude by calling for a shift in public discourse to focus on the broader question of the right to self-defense rather than the narrower question of gun rights.

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