Following the recent mass shooting in Charleston, South Carolina on June 17th, 2015 – a racially motivated act of domestic terrorism – President Barack Obama delivered a sobering address to the American people. With a heavy heart, President Obama spoke the day following the attack, stating:
At some point we as a country will have to reckon with the fact that this type of mass violence does not happen in other advanced countries. And it is in our power to do something about it. I say that recognizing that politics in this town foreclose a lot of those avenues right now. But it would be wrong for us not to acknowledge.
President Obama was primarily referring to gun control in the portion of his speech addressing the cause of attacks like this. Not all mass shootings are racially motivated, and not all qualify as “terrorist” attacks — though Charleston certainly qualifies. And the mass shooting that occurred a just a month later in Chattanooga, Tennessee by a Kuwati-born American citizen was quickly labeled an act of domestic terrorism. But, President Obama makes an important point here: mass shootings are a distinctly American problem. This type of rampage violence happens more in the United States than anywhere else. And gun control is a significant part of the problem. But, gun control is only a partial explanation for mass shootings in the United States.
Mass shootings are also almost universally committed by men. So, this is not just an American problem; it’s a problem related to American masculinity and to the ways American men use guns. But asking whether “guns” or “masculinity” is more of the problem misses the central point that separating the two might not be as simple as it sounds. And, as Mark Follman, Gavin Aronsen, and Deanna Pan note in the Mother Jones Guide to Mass Shootings in America, the problem is getting worse.
We recently wrote a chapter summarizing the research on masculinity and mass shootings for Mindy Stombler and Amanda Jungels’ forthcoming volume, Focus on Social Problems: A Contemporary Reader (Oxford University Press). And we subsequently learned of a new dataset on mass shootings in the U.S. produced by the Stanford Geospatial Center. Their Mass Shootings in America database defines a “mass shooting” as an incident during which an active shooter shoots three or more people in a single episode. Some databases define mass shootings as involving 4 shootings in a single episode. And part of this reveals that the number is, in some ways, arbitrary. What is significant is that we can definitively say that mass shootings in the U.S. are on the rise, however they are defined. The Mother Jones database has shown that mass shootings have become more frequent over the past three decades. And, using the Stanford database, we can see the tend by relying on data that stretches back a bit further.
Additionally, we know that the number of victims of mass shootings is also at an historic high:
We also produced a time-lapse map of mass shootings in the United States illustrating both where and when mass shootings have occurred using the Stanford Geospatial Center’s database to illustrate this trend over time:
Our map charts mass shootings with 3 or more victims over roughly 5 decades, since 1966. The dataset takes us through the Charleston and Chattanooga shootings, which brought 2015 to 42 mass shootings . The dataset is composed of 216 separate incidents only 5 of which were committed by lone woman shooters. Below we produced an interactive map depicting all of the mass shootings in the dataset with brief descriptions of the shootings.
In our chapter in Stombler and Jungels’ forthcoming book, we cull existing research to answer two questions about mass shootings: (1) Why is it men who commit mass shootings? and (2) Why do American men commit mass shootings so much more than men anywhere else? Based on sociological research, we argue that there are two separate explanations – a social psychological explanation and a cultural explanation (see the book for much more detail on each).
A Social Psychological Explanation
Research shows that when an identity someone cares about is called into question, they are likely to react by over-demonstrating qualities associated with that identity. As this relates to gender, some sociologists call this “masculinity threat.” And while mass shootings are not common, research suggests that mass shooters experience masculinity threats from their peers and, sometimes, simply from an inability to live up to societal expectations associated with masculinity (like holding down a steady job, being able to obtain sexual access to women’s bodies, etc.) – some certainly more toxic than others.
The research on this topic is primarily experimental. Men who are brought into labs and have their masculinity experimentally “threatened” react in patterned ways: they are more supportive of violence, less likely to identify sexual coercion, more likely to support statements about the inherent superiority of males, and more.
This research provides important evidence of what men perceive as masculine in the first place (resources they rely on in a crisis) and a new kind evidence regarding the relationship of masculinity and violence. The research does not suggest that men are somehow inherently more violent than women. Rather, it suggests that men are likely to turn to violence when they perceive themselves to be otherwise unable to stake a claim to a masculine gender identity.
A Cultural Explanation
But certainly boys and men experience all manner of gender identity threat in other societies. Why are American boys and men more likely to react with such extreme displays? To answer this question, we need an explanation that articulates the role that American culture plays in influencing boys and young men to turn to this kind of violence at rates higher than anywhere else in the world. This means we need to turn our attention away from the individual characteristics of the shooters themselves and to more carefully investigate the sociocultural contexts in which violent masculinities are produced and valorized.
Men have historically benefited from a great deal of privilege – white, educated, middle and upper class, able-bodied, heterosexual men in particular. Social movements of all kinds have slowly chipped away at some of these privileges. So, while inequality is alive and well, men have also seen a gradual erosion of privileges that flowed more seamlessly to previous generations of men (white, heterosexual, class-privileged men in particular). Michael Kimmel suggests that these changes have produced a uniquely American gendered sentiment that he calls “aggrieved entitlement.” Of course, being pissed off about an inability to cash in on privileges previous generations of men received without question doesn’t always lead to mass shootings. But, from this cultural perspective, mass shootings can be understood as an extremely violent example of a more general issue regarding changes in relations between men and women and historical transformations in gender, race, and class inequality.
Mass shootings are a pressing issue in the United States. And gun control is an important part of this problem. But, when we focus only on the guns, we sometimes gloss over an important fact: mass shootings are also enactments of masculinity. And they will continue to occur when this fact is combined with a sense among some men that male privilege is a birthright – and one that many feel unjustly denied.
Cross-posted at Feminist Reflections and Inequality by (Interior) Design.
Tristan Bridges and Tara Leigh Tober are sociologists at the University of California, Santa Barbara. You can follow them on at @tristanbphd and @tobertara.
Comments 86
gasstationwithoutpumps — July 27, 2015
While American mass shootings are very high by the standards of the developed world, there are areas in the Middle East and in Africa where the levels of mass killings are much higher—where single incidents have as many victims as an entire year of US mass shootings. So arguments based on American exceptionalism ("Why do American men commit mass shootings so much more than men anywhere else?") have built-in assumptions that make the research seem dubious. Slightly more nuanced questions (like why American men have a higher rate of gun violence than other developed countries, or than other countries with functioning national governments), would give the research more credibility.
Gina Luttrell — July 27, 2015
It's interesting to me that the researchers think that gun control is part of the problem but don't note that mass shootings have risen even as gun control has increased (despite incorporation of the second amendment). Or that mass shootings tend to be equally "popular" in areas both with more permissive and more restrictive gun laws.
I find the cultural section to be really lazy, honestly. Surely men in other cultures experience aggrieved entitlement. In fact, I would argue that if you expand the study in other countries to include mass violence with other weapons (knives are particularly popular in China) or even just with bodies (rape, partner abuse), then you find that this kind of violence *is* pretty common around the world.
Male violence is hardly an American problem, and neither is aggrieved entitlement. What I'd be most interested to see is a study comparing the differences between men whose masculinity is challenged who act violently toward themselves (self harm, suicide), vs. acting on others.
Basically, male entitlement, aggrieved entitlement, and masculinity threatening are all complex issues and the researchers don't really even begin to cover all the particular nuances here.
kafkette — July 27, 2015
it's because we've sold out the soul centre of our culture for cash 'n' trash, not to mention that most of our 'political issues', such as they may be media-identified & -created, are no longer reality-based but media- & money-minded moral panic problems, created & inflated for the luxurious pleasures of ambitious academic consortium-building & ego-distention+ad revenue from upclicks. last thing? keep the opportunistic [as in infection] middle class middle-minded micro-talented cheap thieves out of the arts, & leave the people they belong to, who cannot fit with you, do not want to, & never will, a space to breathe. ffs, you have everything else.
that's 90% of it, maybe more, get that done & you can drive the mass shootings down to pre-1980 levels, i stake my life on it. dont do it—& you, et al, wont—these kinds of incidences will increase. i'm talking about the kids, not the politically incorrect copycat schmuck in louisiana. there will always be those, there always have been. most of the younger ones, though, are feeling the rot caused by capitalistic emptiness & created creative human drought, & reacting.
SamuelThomas — July 28, 2015
80 people die a year in mass shootings? That is statistically zero. Over 30,000 people are killed every year in car accidents. Promoting safe driving will save more lives than this crap.
Astoria Thalassa — July 29, 2015
When asked, my mother told me "US people are crazy because they have a dysfunctional culture", and left it at that.
I think that's an avenue worth pursuing, though. These males are receiving lots of conflictive messages: For instance, women are being given more power and societal advancement is happening (although perhaps not as fast as people would like), it's said women are valued at the same time there's more toy-gendering than ever before, at the same time their bodies are commoditised, that males get told by media they're entitled to a beautiful girlfriend, and so on. It's only one of many.
Wonder how that dissonance affects their mindset?
The Swiss have weapons in their homes, and have defintiely have mass shootings (the Zug massacre, Menznau for instance), but such incidents are shocking because, relative to the US, they're rarer in Switzerland.
In my country, on the other hand, civilians do not have ready access to weaponry. I can not say whether this sort of thing happened before my time, but I can say it has never happened in my lifetime pretty confidently.
mcart — July 29, 2015
In response to the statement regarding the Middle East, you are comparing apples and oranges. You are comparing war zones to the U.S. however, you will notice a rise in mass shootings in the US that correspond to our entering the wars in the Middle East. Violence begets violences. What would be a good question to ask would be, "What is the correlation between the marked rise in our mass shootings, and our gun laws?
Jamie Riehl — July 29, 2015
I don't understand how the loss of privilege argument applies unusually to the US. Isn't this true for much of the world? The privilege of men, esp white men, is in the process of being challenged by social movements all over, right?
Dave — August 1, 2015
"Men have historically benefited from a great deal of privilege – white, educated, middle and upper class, able-bodied, heterosexual men in particular. Social movements of all kinds have slowly chipped away at some of these privileges."
Are these kinds of crimes predominately committed by educated, middle, and upper class men? Or poorer, less educated generations of educated, middle and upper class families? Do they predominately target minorities or women who have absorbed some of those advantages? What support do you have for linking Privilege to mass shootings?
Alex Welti — August 1, 2015
That must be it... it couldn't possibly have anything to do with the loss of morality, the erosion of the family unit, efforts to keep religion out of the public square, devaluation of life (abortions for convenience, not for medical or rape reasons) violence on TV and in video games, or access to graphic material on the internet?
All these things have been increasing in the US in the last 50 years, that much is obvious. And all these things have been less prevalent in other countries.
Masculinity hasn't been under attack, it has been given more freedom than ever - now it's OK to show emotions, take the high road, walk away from a fight, cry at the movies. Not so in the old days.
To take responsibility, turn the other cheek, sacrifice for others, to be fair to everyone - these things are a sign of strength, not weakness, whether you're a woman or a man (or not sure what you are)...
Clinging to the old ideas of "survival of the fittest, dog eat dog, respect for the alpha males" is a sure sign of weakness... like finding your confidence hiding behind a cigarette or in a bottle of alcohol. I imagine it's sad really... to be the kind of person who has to treat others with contempt to feel your own life has value. Or, on the other side of the divide, to feel like you have to have what someone else has, or take it away from them to be equal...
So, I think you've made a mistake - what evidence is there that masculinity is under attack as you think? There's nothing BUT evidence for the loss of morality (especially in the US) over the last 50 years...
I know it's way more complicated than that. "The problem with history is we don't learn from history"... but, I think the real problem with history is people won't let it die and then move on to something better. We have a black president, won't be long we'll have a woman president, it's time for racism and inequality to die... but, I'm afraid people won't know what to do with themselves unless they drag up the past and pick open the wounds... they're not going to heal if you keep picking them open! But. I'm starting to ramble...
Jaki Benson — August 4, 2015
>mfw gun homicide rates are down by 49% since 1993
but by all means continue with your alarmist fear-mongering, lol
tracychess — August 18, 2015
Many mass shootings are not murder, as much as they are suicide, "going out with a bang." Mass murder suicides do not expect to survive, do not plan to survive. It's the American version of a suicide bomber.
Snookie — August 18, 2015
I just saw this post pop-up on Digg. It is amazing that the writers (both PhDs) don't understand the very prejudice that forms the launching pad for this post's point of view.
Of course being in the group that the authors labeled as the core of the subject ... what do I know, guess I'm just feeling threatened.
In any case I really laughed so hard I fell off my chair.
I dare the authors to take on the topic of how African-American males are violet and what forms the basis of the seemingly daily incidents of black men involved in street conflicts. Dare you!
Maybe you could coin a nice piece about how the group you identified in this post "feels threatened" by this other group and that MUST be the reason.
I'm sure it would fit nicely into your POV and play very well in audiences seeking political correct thinking and analysis.
Ladies (chauvinistic threatened entitled white middle age male tone intended) - you need to get your hair and nail done and stop writing crap like this....
LF — August 18, 2015
Have you looked into the link to single parent households and how many of these shooters come from them?
It seems you missed that entirely in the cultural section.
Thorvalt Clinton — August 19, 2015
What kind of fucking idiot are you? Men act out because their privelege is being chopped away???? How about: men act out because you fucking imbeciles treat them like shit. They act out because they have been made completely ancillary and the deal society gives them is shit. You claim they are privileged: privileged to be treated like shit? You're a fucking idiot - They have so much privilege, privilege for what? To live with you idiots who whine and moan about how good men have it instead of just getting the fuck on with your life?
I don't fucking know what male privilege is: the privilege to shut the fuck up and do your motherfucking job? Brilliant privilege! Why don't we talk about female privilege instead? Female privilege: the right to say whatever the fuck you want to say and have people agree with you no matter how fucking dumb it is because you are a woman and you fucking said it. Now THAT'S a privilege.
You fucking narcissistic IDIOT. You FUCKING RETARD. YOU FUCKING DISGUST.
If you treat a man like he is less than human, what the fuck do you think is going to happen? We're not talking treating a man like an equal (unless you believe you are made of shit and therefore treating him like shit is treating him as an equal) -- we're talking about treating a man as if he's a fucking externality. Like in economics.
Make sure you kill yourself you ivory tower idiots. Men kill themselves and kill others because they can't eat as many twinkles as they would like to eat. What kind of motherfucking idiot are you?
pjsx — August 19, 2015
I think the fact that movies and television portray violence as the solution to all problems is a large contributor. Even our government does it. Problem in the Middle East? Bomb them. Bully at school? Beat him up. Aliens from space? Kill them all. I could do this all day.
Allison Thomas — August 20, 2015
Can we please be much clearer that this is primarily a WHITE phenomenon? Or at least show us these statistics as well? The authors seem to imply this by discussing the reduction of white male privilege by other groups (women, persons of color)...but we need to call it out people.
spencer60 — August 20, 2015
The fundamental problem with this story is that 'mass shootings' are NOT on the rise.
Mother Jones is hardly a scientific entity, and their 'database' is more anecdotal than anything else.
Add in the fact that they followed the FBI's recent tactic of calling any shooting involving two people or more a 'mass shooting', and you have a classic case of cooking the data to show what you want.
In reality, the number of mass attacks (of which shootings are only a subset) are fairly constant when you average them out.
However they do seem to occur in 'spurts', which most experts attribute to copycat attacks.
As for the attackers being mostly male... that's hardly a surprise. Most violent crimes are committed by males.
Some of the reasons suggested are potentially valid, although there are plenty of others that would also fit.
It's unfortunate that the authors felt it necessary to push the propaganda about mass attacks being on the rise, instead of simply discussing the possible reasons these attacks happen at all.
quixotefoo — August 26, 2015
Alas, I give in to those that argue that the social science are anything but science.
Angela Erdstrom — September 3, 2015
It seems that the researchers overlooked one possibly important factor: circumcision. Forced genital cutting of infants is common in the US. The rate is, fortunately, declining, but a large number of American boys and men were subjected to it as babies.
Mass Shootings in the U.S. are on the Rise. What Makes American Men So Dangerous? – Sociological Images | Zipczyk - Worth a Second Look — September 11, 2015
[…] http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2015/07/27/mass-shootings-in-the-u-s-what-makes-so-many-america… […]
Men’s Wrongs | Change — September 18, 2015
[…] men in relation to gender equity it is often a negative portrayal. This can be seen in the article “Mass Shootings in the U.S. are on the Rise. What Makes American Men So Dangerous?” While this is a very lengthy read, from just from the title you can see how it generalizes that […]
CitizenOf1Earth — October 4, 2015
If you look at the detailed data on Mother Jones, they say 44 out of 70 male killers were white men. That's about 63% (62.857...).
Guess what the percentage of white (not Hispanic or Latino) males of the total male population is according to the latest census data as of 2014. 62.1% or less (since women slightly outnumber men).
So I don't understand how they figure mass shooters can be a "white" male privilege problem if the percentage of white male mass shooters is roughly equal to the percentage of white males within the total male population. A male problem for sure, but not a white male issue if you consider the larger percentage of white males that make up the total male population in the USA. More white male, more likely to have more white male mass shooters.
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/00000.html
In fact, 11 out 70 of the male mass shooters were black men (15.7%) and according to the census black males are about 13.2% or less of the total population, a 2.5% difference. Again like whites, there are fewer black males than black females, so it's even greater than 2.5%. I still don't think that's enough to conclude it's a black male problem either. Black males certainly aren't privileged in the US, so it's certainly not a privilege issue for them.
James May — October 12, 2015
These obviously are folks with a BS, MS, and PhD. Everybody knows what BS is, MS is more of the same, and PhD, is Piled high and Deep. The FBI defines a mass shooting as 4 or more killed. These fools are calling it where 4 or more are around without anyone having to be hit or killed.
Brenton LaBrie — October 31, 2015
This article is too long to read but what I will say as a children's behavioral case manager is Philly's ghetto is this kids receiving treatment as a behavioral issue were the kids getting picked on and lashing out. I was always curious why the bully was never in therapy. As an adult I've been bullied by my boss causing me a lot of emotional problems. They could insult me and overwork me but their aren't consequenses for being am asshole. It's too bad though.
Bill Hoover — January 15, 2016
All the exaggerated talk of "gun violence" increases paranoia. More people died in mass shootings in France last year than in the U.S.
Why did the La Loche Community School shooter kill 5 injure 2? - Scallywag and Vagabond — January 22, 2016
[…] Community school shooting even more stark is the fact, unlike in the United States, where they are almost a weekly phenomenon, mass shootings are relatively rare in Canada. A fact often cited because of Canada’s […]
Giftige mannelijkheid en vrouwenhaat, de vergeten kant van massamoord | De Zesde Clan — June 14, 2016
[…] weinig aandacht voor een ander structureel gegeven. Op een paar na gaat het bij de meeste van 216 schietpartijen met meerdere slachtoffers sinds 1966 om mannelijke daders. Daarnaast mishandelen of vermoorden deze mannelijke daders opvallend vaak vrouwen, al dan niet in […]
workingpoor — July 10, 2016
I think all these mass shooting of late are carefully orestraced ordeals by the ones who stand to gain the most from gun control being implemented.
Make America Great Again? — July 27, 2016
[…] for a vast majority of violent crimes in America, especially homicide against white Americans and mass shootings (which are on the rise in […]
Gary Doyon — November 25, 2016
What all of you missed in this explanation was how far off the mark Polls and investigations can be if data is influenced by the media. The real problem lies in one single word and this words covers every ill will and demeanor that has ever and will ever be in our lives. THE EGO. The ego of todays women and males is the crux of the problem. We have allowed our EGO to rule our thoughts and in doing so it has brought about our slow destruction. Mass Killings are most definitely caused by race, color, and creed and simple frustration. But the EGO is what drives it. Like a devil sitting on your shoulders it steers your intellect into allowing you to commit the most heinous of crimes to simple misdemeanors. It makes you covet. When you covet you are showing anger with others for not having what they have. That simple time line of thoughts creates the demons on earth and feeds them through their deeds.
How do we get rid of the EGO? I have no fucking clue. But the explanations given by our so called intellectuals is seriously screwing with your minds. Coupled with the false messages the media is giving you on a daily basis. It is a wonder we all haven't imploded from the shear immoral information overload.
You worry about terrorists… I’ll worry about men – Not an expert but a "thoughtspert" — May 3, 2017
[…] This toxic approach to masculinity has been directly linked to the sense of entitlement that drives many mass shooters to commit their crimes.” We are not allowed to say no, and if we do say no we run the risk of […]
Heisenberg — October 2, 2017
Sadly, your charts need to be updated through 2017.
junktex — February 26, 2018
Globaliosts want gun control.Simple.Same reason for the endless wars.
Nick — May 19, 2018
What about toxic femininity? What about the ridiculously standards women have for men in America? Or the constant male bashing that goes on in American society and among these female "scientists". Maybe that's why there are so many mass shootings. American females aren't oppressed - they are bullies and use the media + beta males to do their bidding.
Revisiting the Messy Language of the Second Amendment | JSTOR Daily — July 11, 2018
[…] a very vocal minority that has a major influence on blocking gun legislation. What’s more, mass shootings are very much on the rise, the most recent at Margory Stoneman Douglass High School in Parkland, Florida, in which seventeen […]
You worry about terrorists… I’ll worry about men — September 2, 2019
[…] This toxic approach to masculinity has been directly linked to the sense of entitlement that drives many mass shooters to commit their crimes.” We are not allowed to say no, and if we do say no we run the risk of […]
Jack MOD — September 1, 2021
gun control in the portion of his speech addressing the cause of attacks like this,
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YOU WORRY ABOUT TERRORISTS… I’LL WORRY ABOUT MEN – Jen Fry Talks — March 15, 2022
[…] to masculinity has been directly linked to the sense of entitlement that drives many mass shooters to commit their crimes.” We are not allowed to say no, and if we do say no we run the risk […]
Keith D Loriino — November 21, 2022
Because know one cares about men,bother are dumped, divirced and sick if being a commodity instead of a human