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Book Review of Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture

Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture
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Another reviewer has asserted that 'much' of the data in this book has been called into question, & been shown to be false. This is incorrect. A small subset of the author's research has been shown to be in error, mostly his treatment of probate records. The reviewer also claims that the data was 'fudged'. The author has never been credibly accused of having falsified data. Both of these claims are oft-repeated canards propagated by gun-lobby interests & sympathizers.

But the important point is that the large majority of his research has in fact been corroborated, rather than the other way round. This in the face of (or perhaps because of) a level of scrutiny afforded very few works of history ever published. The author has responded to this with as thorough an emendation as I have ever seen, something very rare in academia or in publishing. This can be found in the second edition of this book, which is to be recommended above this edition (listed at PBS at http://www.paperbackswap.com/book/details/9781932360073-Arming+America+The+Origins+of+a+National+Gun+Culture). For a synopsis of the author's detailed response, see http://www.softskull.com/files/weighed_even_balance.pdf .

It is lamentable that the author was so sloppy with a portion of his data, as is his inept handling of the subsequent inevitable controversy (striking as the work does, although more obliquely than most gun advocates seem to imagine, at America's self-image).

The author's thesis is cogent & thought-provoking, & well worth engaging with. Don't be steered away by the controversy.

HollyL: The prize was revoked--& Bellesiles blackballed--because of a smear campaign & the organization's need to save face in the wake of it. Levels of error comparable to that found in the first edition of this book are far from uncommon even at the top levels of research. It is only when the thesis flies in the face of a powerful culture (gun culture & lobby) that the errors are made too much of. In point of fact, few books have been as scrutinized as this one, & considering that the great majority of the data, & the most relevant data, in fact *survived* the scrutiny intact makes its case *stronger*.

And anyway, prizes are part of the apparatus of academic careerism, not components of a reasoned argument. The thesis of this book was never made more reasonable or justified by the prize, nor has it been made less so by its revocation. It may be damning in the court of public opinion, but it has nothing at all to do with the validity of the argument.