I'm not entirely sure why we're citing and quoting "Reason" hereabouts in the first place, but as long as we're doing it ...
http://reason.com/0105/fe.ak.their.shtml... I took lessons from instructors certified by the National Rifle Association, went to gun shows, and shot on ranges and in competitions. Most importantly, I interviewed 37 adult men and women who identified themselves as gun enthusiasts ("shooters" is their preferred term).
I spent the most time with a local posse of cowboy action shooters, and in the process became an active participant in their sport. Beyond dressing in period costumes and using old-style weapons, cowboy action shooters construct elaborate mock-ups of Old West towns using painted plywood and vivid imaginations. These cow towns are assembled and dismantled on local shooting ranges on the weekends, all for the purpose of the somewhat complicated shooting competitions sketched out at the start of this article. Some of the better-attended (and better-financed) shoots include makeshift dance halls and saloons. Shooters eat, drink, dance, hang out, and, most important, shoot. I enjoyed spending time with the cowboy action shooters. This part of my research constituted what anthropologists call "participant observation," and my observations and assessments composed my anthropological data.
Now, the current "Reason" article characterizes this as follows:
She confined her survey to a particular area (the San Francisco Bay area) rather than glossing the gun culture as a whole.
and that is indeed one way of characterizing it. I gotta wonder, of course; how many
gun enthusiasts hereabouts are part of that particular niche of the "gun culture"?
I mean, if I were choosing an element of gun culture to go immerse myself in for a few weeks, I probably wouldn't choose inner-city Detroit either. Or the hunting crowd. But I might really not present the element that I did hang out with as representative of anything or anybody else. And of course (read on) I'm not claiming that Kohn necessarily did.
Now, that appeared in the May 2001 edition. I look in June 2001 for letters in response. None there (but there sure is a lot of other crap to wade through.) So I try July 2001. ... Nope, just a bit of applause for some other anti-firearms control type article ... and David Horowitz with his nose out of joint. August/September ... nope again.
So hmm. When the author of the current article says, and you quote:
Kohn’s own research for Shooters, some of which appeared in this magazine (“Their Aim Is True,” May 2001), elicited predictable responses. One colleague said she was performing a “social service by researching ‘such disgusting people.’” Another said that unless Kohn acknowledged the “inherent pathology” of gun enthusiasm, she was disrespecting victims of gun violence.
... I guess that I'm to assume that the author is faithfully and accurately representing scholarly response to her writing, and not by any means cherry-picking or quoting out of context or anything like that. And I can take that short passage as all I need to know about the matter.
Maybe you glossed over that part in the article, or maybe those academics werent academic enough for you?I give up. Since
they weren't even named, how the fuck would I know how "academic" they are? Are we really holding up Reason Magazine as a paragon of unbiased reportage?
Well, it would appear that is not the case, wouldnt it? And it would appear to be an adequate sample size not only for her doctoral degree, but also for book publication, wouldnt it?Well, these are, of course, two quite different things.
Theses and dissertations are what they are: studies of what they are studying. Unless they themselves present some reason for doing so, there really just isn't any reason to think that their conclusions can be generalized to anything or anyone else at all.
And the criteria for book publishing ... well hmm. Do you suppose that the potential profit to the author and publisher might have anything at all to do with that?
Maybe, just maybe, if you spelled Abigail Kohn correctly, ...Well, I wasn't going to comment on your
prEying me to tell, or your saying that
Perhaps <my> trying (does no one know the difference between
your and
you are at all these days?) -- especially since I do seem to have managed to type
You may rementer myself -- but now that you mention it.
Mine, of course, were
typgraphical (haha, eponymy, anyone? thank goodness for proofreading) typographical errors. And given that I had spelled "Abigail" correctly every other time I'd used the word in this thread, perhaps you had some reason for suggesting that I did not do so when I did the search. Or how in heaven's name I managed to find nearly 1000 results, as I said I did, where others had apparently made the same error.
Finished now?
Hmm, Im not scratchin my head as to where you are coming from at this point, I just wonder why you thought it would go unnoticed?Well, I'm sure scratching mine. Because I don't have a clue what you're on about.
Nevertheless, I fail to see how that information about her previous interests sheds any conclusive light on her academic integrity. Im sure you do though.Well, perhaps if I had said that her previous interests did shed any light on her academic integrity, I'd be able to come up with a reason for you. I didn't.
Subject to the one caveat I have stated -- I don't know whether she investigated the entire spectrum of cultural and commercial influences on the people she interviewed in an attempt to determine
why they have the interests they have, and I'm not going to buy the book to find out -- I don't see too much problem with her scholarship.
She studied 37 people, and wrote about those 37 people and her broader experiences in the context in which she found them, and had a damned fine time while she was doing it. She wasn't conducting experiments in curing cancer, after all. She's an anthropologist, and they do indeed do some wild and wooly things at times, but their efforts are hardly matters of life and death, so there's no reason for anybody to particularly care that their methods may be a little less than scientifically rigorous.
No, my concern is much less with Kohn and her work than with all the people who are using her and it for their own purposes, and specifically for purposes that, it seems to me, they really aren't up to.