“At once page-turning and deeply disquieting, Harel Shapira’s Basic Pistol is a must read.”—Heather Ann Thompson, author of Fear and Fury and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Blood in the Water
To understand why so many people die by the gun, we must first understand how so many people live by the gun.
This is the realization that led sociologist Harel Shapira to embed himself in Tactical Training, a popular firearms school in rural Texas. Here, students learn that any grocery store trip could become a shootout, and any day could be the day that a home intruder murders your family. They learn that waiting for the police to save the day is a death sentence. To be safe is to always carry a gun—and to always be ready and willing to use it.
Forty-two classes, ten thousand rounds of ammunition, and one concealed carry license later, Shapira has emerged with Basic Pistol, a dark and richly textured plunge into a uniquely American way of living. Basic Pistol follows Shapira’s fraught journey through the world of firearms schools and into a community for whom gun ownership is livelihood, is tradition, is identity. It exposes the racist fears and heroic fantasies gun owners are taught to carry alongside their guns. It shows how a relentless sense of vulnerability has empowered them to shoot with impunity. And it argues this education in violence, as much as any legislation, has torn through the social fabric, killing not only people but the very kinds of relationships that make democracy viable.
Page-turning and paradigm-shifting, Basic Pistol shows that if there’s any hope of reining in gun violence, it must start with the people who carry the guns.
Author
Harel Shapira
Harel Shapira is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his BA from the University of Chicago and his PhD from Columbia University. Shapira uses long- term ethnographic research to understand right- wing politics and gun culture in contemporary America. He is the author of Waiting for José: The Minutemen’s Pursuit of America (Princeton University Press, 2013) and the coeditor of Gun Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Politics, Policy, and Practice (Oxford University Press, 2019, with Jennifer Carlson and Kristin Goss). His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation as well as the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, and his writing has been featured in numerous outlets, including The New York Times and The New Republic. He was named an Andrew Carnegie Fellow in 2015 and a Member of the Institute for Advanced Study in 2021.
Learn More about Harel Shapira