Gun sellers aren’t just merchants of guns but are also agents of conservative politics and ideals. That’s because gun sales in America aren’t only an economic exchange, but also a cultural one, with serious implications for society at large.
In Merchants of the Right: Gun Sellers and the Crisis of American Democracy, Jennifer Carlson’s warning is clear: armed conservatives are working toward a democracy not of the ballot, but of the bullet. But these dynamics go beyond the political divide that courses through American society. That’s because guns and politics mix in unpredictable ways, regardless of the party gun sellers and purchasers support. Red or Blue, guns bring uncertainty into neighborhoods and fear into schools, and Americans are arming themselves more than ever before.
Drawing on a wealth of interviews conducted with gun sellers across the United States, Carlson presents a view of gun sales and ownership through the lens of 2020-21: the political unrest leading up to January 6th, pandemic insecurities and the resulting dramatic increase in gun sales—not just to existing conservative gun owners, but to new gun owners from every demographic background. Carlson’s social analysis presents a nuanced portrait of the relationship between conservative gun culture, armed individualism, conspiracism, partisanship and the knife’s edge American democracy teeters on.
Jennifer Carlson, (PhD) is Professor of Sociology at Arizona State University, where she directs the Center for the Study of Guns in Society. In 2022 she was awarded a MacArthur Genius grant for her research into how guns shape American life in a multitude of ways. She is known for her non-fiction books Policing the Second Amendment and Citizen-Protectors. Her most recent book is Merchants of the Right, which explores the surge of gun sales during the pandemic and the 2020 election.
We will end the evening with a performance by spoken word artist Jackie Ashkin.