Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas

This article explores everyday experiences and visual-spatial expressions related to the implementation of SB 11, the Texas Senate Bill that allows “License to Carry” (LTC) holders to bring guns onto public university campuses. In particular, it considers the ways in which members of The University...

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Main Author: Benita Heiskanen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2020-12-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/15817
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author Benita Heiskanen
author_facet Benita Heiskanen
author_sort Benita Heiskanen
collection DOAJ
description This article explores everyday experiences and visual-spatial expressions related to the implementation of SB 11, the Texas Senate Bill that allows “License to Carry” (LTC) holders to bring guns onto public university campuses. In particular, it considers the ways in which members of The University of Texas at Austin community delineate their visual-spatial surroundings and sensory perceptions on campus before and after the implementation of the Campus Carry law. It considers a range of visual interventions by lawmakers and university administrators, as well as counter-visuals created by grassroots activists, faculty, and students. Moreover, it discusses the various ways in which policies are drafted to suppress awareness of firearms from the visual topography of campus space. Drawing on Jacques Rancière’s work on the political dimension of aesthetics, the research presents Campus Carry as an example of a particular aesthetic-political regime created by state legislators and negotiated by the university community. The article dem­onstrates a tension between seeing and unseeing—remembering and forgetting—the armed campus space and the range of visual metaphors through which firearms are discussed without ever exhibiting the actual, physical object of a gun. The focus on lived experiences that explicate the ramifications of the Campus Carry legislation in Texas contributes an important case for broader analysis of U.S. gun politics and senses of security and insecurity within educational establishments.
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spelling doaj-art-3ba57009b95f4aafb7ab88fc8a82275d2025-01-06T09:09:03ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362020-12-0115210.4000/ejas.15817Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in TexasBenita HeiskanenThis article explores everyday experiences and visual-spatial expressions related to the implementation of SB 11, the Texas Senate Bill that allows “License to Carry” (LTC) holders to bring guns onto public university campuses. In particular, it considers the ways in which members of The University of Texas at Austin community delineate their visual-spatial surroundings and sensory perceptions on campus before and after the implementation of the Campus Carry law. It considers a range of visual interventions by lawmakers and university administrators, as well as counter-visuals created by grassroots activists, faculty, and students. Moreover, it discusses the various ways in which policies are drafted to suppress awareness of firearms from the visual topography of campus space. Drawing on Jacques Rancière’s work on the political dimension of aesthetics, the research presents Campus Carry as an example of a particular aesthetic-political regime created by state legislators and negotiated by the university community. The article dem­onstrates a tension between seeing and unseeing—remembering and forgetting—the armed campus space and the range of visual metaphors through which firearms are discussed without ever exhibiting the actual, physical object of a gun. The focus on lived experiences that explicate the ramifications of the Campus Carry legislation in Texas contributes an important case for broader analysis of U.S. gun politics and senses of security and insecurity within educational establishments.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/15817aestheticsTexasvisual cultureCampus Carrygun cultureremembering and forgetting
spellingShingle Benita Heiskanen
Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas
European Journal of American Studies
aesthetics
Texas
visual culture
Campus Carry
gun culture
remembering and forgetting
title Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas
title_full Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas
title_fullStr Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas
title_full_unstemmed Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas
title_short Un/Seeing Campus Carry: Experiencing Gun Culture in Texas
title_sort un seeing campus carry experiencing gun culture in texas
topic aesthetics
Texas
visual culture
Campus Carry
gun culture
remembering and forgetting
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/15817
work_keys_str_mv AT benitaheiskanen unseeingcampuscarryexperiencingguncultureintexas