ECU Libraries Catalog

A right to bear arms? : the contested role of history in contemporary debates on the Second Amendment / edited by Jennifer Tucker, Barton C. Hacker, and Margaret Vining.

Format Book and Print
Publication Info Washington, D.C. : Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, 2019.
Descriptionix, 345 pages ; 27 cm.
Subject(s)
Other author/creatorTucker, Jennifer, 1965- editor.
Other author/creatorHacker, Barton C., 1935- editor.
Other author/creatorVining, Margaret, editor.
Other author/creatorSmithsonian Institution Scholarly Press publisher.
Portion of title Contested role of history in contemporary debates on the Second Amendment
Series A Smithsonian Contribution to Knowledge
Smithsonian contribution to knowledge. ^A1054879
Contents Guns and firearms ownership in seventeenth and eighteenth-century england and america -- The right to arms and the anglo-american tradition : historical debate -- History and the supreme court : opposing legal viewpoints.
Abstract "The history of firearm use and possession is a topic of considerable contemporary debate. Yet, what do we actually know about firearms in the Anglo-American tradition? How is the history of firearms taught and remembered? In recent years historians and legal scholars have examined different threads of the densely interwoven relationships between firearms and American culture and society. This history stretches back to 14th-century England and includes locations as diverse as Puritan Massachusetts and 19th-century Dodge City. Rather than assume a static, unchanging relationship to firearms, historians and legal scholars have shown that this history has been closely related to the broader processes of social change that transformed American society from an early modern pre-industrial culture governed by a powerful monarch to a multi-cultural industrial democracy. The book addresses aspects of the current state of historical scholarship on firearms; offers a rare, bipartisan view of the significant breadth of the current state of historical scholarship on firearms history; and includes views of legal practitioners with divergent interpretations of the current meaning of the Second Amendment."--Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 311-333) and index.
Copyright noteSmithsonian Institution compilation copyright 2019
Issued in other formOnline version: Right to bear arms? Washington, D.C. : Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, 2019 9781944466268
Genre/formHistory.
LCCN 2018058276
ISBN9781944466251 (hardcover)
ISBN1944466258 (hardcover)
ISBN(ebook)
Govt. docs number SI 1.60:R 44

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner General Stacks KF3941 .R543 2019 ✔ Available Place Hold