Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

What We've Become

Living and Dying in a Country of Arms

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2024

A searing reflection on the broken promise of safety in America.

When a naked, mentally ill white man with an AR-15 killed four young adults of color at a Waffle House, Nashville-based physician and gun policy scholar Dr. Jonathan M. Metzl once again advocated for commonsense gun reform. But as he peeled back evidence surrounding the racially charged mass shooting, a shocking question emerged: Did the public health approach he had championed for years have it all wrong?

Long at the forefront of a movement advocating for gun reform as a matter of public health, Metzl has been on constant media call in the aftermath of fatal shootings. But the 2018 Nashville killings led him on a path toward recognizing the limitations of biomedical frameworks for fully diagnosing or treating the impassioned complexities of American gun politics. As he came to understand it, public health is a harder sell in a nation that fundamentally disagrees about what it means to be safe, healthy, or free.

In What We've Become, Metzl reckons both with the long history of distrust of public health and the larger forces—social, ideological, historical, racial, and political—that allow mass shootings to occur on a near daily basis in America. Looking closely at the cycle in which mass shootings lead to shock, horror, calls for action, and, ultimately, political gridlock, he explores what happens to the soul of a nation—and the meanings of safety and community—when we normalize violence as an acceptable trade-off for freedom. Mass shootings and our inability to stop them have become more than horrific crimes: they are an American national autobiography.

This brilliant, piercing analysis points to mass shootings as a symptom of our most unresolved national conflicts. What We've Become ultimately sets us on the path of alliance forging, racial reckoning, and political power brokering we must take to put things right.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2024
      On April 22, 2018, a white man carrying an AR15 opened fire on a Waffle House in Antioch, TN, killing four young people of color and wounding many others. He had recently moved to the Nashville area due to the state's lax gun laws. Despite run-ins with police, the FBI, and his own concerned family members in his home state of Illinois, the shooter retained his weapons and was not viewed as an imminent threat. Professor and gun violence researcher Metzl (Dying of Whiteness, 2019) examines the systems, cultures, politics, racism, and laws that allowed the shooter to take the lives of Joe Perez Jr., Taurean Sanderlin, DeEbony Groves, and Akilah Dasilva. Metzl shows how the public health frameworks used by the Left to successfully reduce smoking and drunk driving failed in the face of the NRA and charts the emergence of gun ownership as an identity. He situates the Waffle House shooting in the larger context of national debates over the Second Amendment. Metzl traces the shooter's path to that day while honoring the victims and their families in this essential study of how mass shootings in the U.S. have become commonplace.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 1, 2024
      A penetrating look at our failed attempts to curb gun violence. In April 2018, 29-year-old Travis Reinking, "another angry white man with a gun," drove from his home in Illinois to Nashville, where he opened fire on the late-night patrons of a Waffle House, most of them young, working-class Black and Latine people. Four died in the shooting, and Reinking eluded capture for a couple of days. When he was caught, it was revealed that he suffered from mental illness and had acted in a threatening manner before. Metzl, a Nashville-based doctor and sociologist and author of Dying of Whiteness, has been arguing for years that gun violence is a public health issue, an analysis that he now considers incomplete. "Strategies from the tobacco wars, the seat belt wars, or other last-century profits-versus-people contests were never going to change the terms of the debate," he writes. Instead, the epidemic of mass-shooter gun violence, almost all committed by young white men, is the logical manifestation of "a larger racial conflict that [aims] to correct past wrongs and guard against encroachment from woke liberals, undeserving minorities, coastal elites, and overreaching governments." In other words, it's not a bug but a feature, and any meaningful gun reform must be a subset of a larger effort to erase inequalities and advance civil rights. The problem of Reinking, like that of all those other angry young white men, is structural, his actions "buoyed by laws, judges, social mores, financial systems, permissive policies, and centuries of history that [have] defined guns as symbols of white liberty." Metzl's argument is consistently persuasive and, unfortunately, both timely and probably timeless, given the reluctance of those in power to do anything to halt the bloodshed. A powerful, convincing effort to reframe the discussion around gun control and its discontents.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading