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Journal Article

Citation

Vicaro MP, Seitz DW. Cult. Stud. Crit. Methodol. 2017; 17(2): 147-151.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1532708615599895

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In the wake of recent, high profile mass shootings, the deranged mind has become a common discursive ground for policy makers, pundits, gun enthusiasts, and gun control advocates alike. Interested parties on both sides of the gun control/rights debate have agreed that laws restricting gun ownership should be assessed according to their ability to protect the innocent citizen from the unpredictable criminal violence of the insane (despite the fact that mass shootings account for only one tenth of 1% of all homicides committed with a gun). Contextualizing this development within both distant and recent U.S. history, we argue that policy proposals that tie contemporary gun violence prevention to mental health care can be seen as part of a confluence of technologies of social governance that includes: a turn from therapeutic to risk-management approaches to mental health care; a turn from retrospective/forensic to prospective/preventative approaches to criminal justice; and, a broader turn toward a criminological view of civic identity. Furthermore, by shifting the locus of violence from the gun to the interior world of the potential violent criminal, the mental health turn dematerializes the gun at the very moments when its thingliness is most vivid.


Language: en

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