Cross-posted at CNN.
For the past few days, Americans have been weeping together and wringing our hands once again at the senseless tragedy of a mass murder inside a school. The horrific scene in Newtown, Connecticut, is now seared permanently in our collective conscience, as we search for answers. We’ll look at the photograph of Adam Lanza and ask over and over again how he could have come to such a deadly crossroads.
We still know nothing about his motives, only the devastating carnage he wrought. And yet we’ve already heard from experts who talk about mental illness, Asperger’s syndrome, depression, and autism. The chorus of gun boosters has defensively chimed in about how gun control would not have prevented this.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee offered the theory that since “we have systematically removed God from our schools, should we be so surprised that schools would become a place of carnage?” (As if those heathen children deserved it?)
All the while, we continue to miss other crucial variables — even though they are staring right back at us when we look at that photograph. Adam Lanza was a middle class white guy.
If the shooter were black and the school urban, we’d hear about the culture of poverty; about how inner-city life breeds crime and violence; perhaps even some theories about a purported tendency among blacks towards violence.
As we’ve seen in the past week, it’s not only those living on the fringes of society who express anger through gun violence.
Yet the obvious fact that Lanza — and nearly all the recent mass murderers who targeted non-work settings — were middle class white boys seems to barely register. Look again at the pictures of Jared Lee Loughner (Tucson), James Eagan Holmes (Aurora) and Wade Michael Page (Oak Creek) — a few of the mass killers of the past couple of years. (Yes, the case of Seung-Hui Cho, the perpetrator at Virginia Tech, the worst school shooting in our history, stands out as the exception. And worth discussing.)
Why are angry young men setting out to kill entire crowds of strangers?
Motivations are hard to pin down, but gender is the single most obvious and intractable variable when it comes to violence in America. Men and boys are responsible for 95% of all violent crimes in this country. “Male criminal participation in serious crimes at any age greatly exceeds that of females, regardless of source of data, crime type, level of involvement, or measure of participation” is how the National Academy of Sciences summed up the extant research.
How does masculinity figure into this? From an early age, boys learn that violence is not only an acceptable form of conflict resolution, but one that is admired. However the belief that violence is an inherently male characteristic is a fallacy. Most boys don’t carry weapons, and almost all don’t kill: are they not boys? Boys learn it.
They learn it from their fathers. They learn it from a media that glorifies it, from sports heroes who commit felonies and get big contracts, from a culture saturated in images of heroic and redemptive violence. They learn it from each other.
In talking to more than 400 young men for my book, Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men, I heard over and over again what they learn about violence. They learn that if they are crossed, they have the manly obligation to fight back. They learn that they are entitled to feel like a real man, and that they have the right to annihilate anyone who challenges that sense of entitlement.
This sense of entitlement is part of the package deal of American manhood — the culture that doesn’t start the fight, as Margaret Mead pointed out in her analysis of American military history, but retaliates far out of proportion to the initial grievance. They learn that “aggrieved entitlement” is a legitimate justification for violent explosion.
The easy availability of guns is another crucial variable. After the terrible school shooting in Dunblane, Scotland, in 1996, Great Britain enacted several laws that effectively made owning handguns illegal in that country. The murder rate in the U.S. is more than three times higher than Britain.
And yes, boys have resorted to violence for a long time, but sticks and fists and even the occasional switchblade do not create the bloodbaths of the past few years. In 2011, more than 80% of all homicides among boys aged 15 to 19 were firearm related.
We need a conversation about gun control laws. And far more sweeping — and necessary — is a national meditation on how our ideals of manhood became so entangled with violence.
It’s also worth discussing why so many of these young mass murderers are white. Surely boys of color have that same need to prove their masculinity, and a similar sense of entitlement to annihilate those who threaten it. Perhaps the only difference is that it seems to be nearly the exclusive province of white boys to so dramatically expand the range of their revenge and seek to destroy the entire world, not simply the person or group that committed the supposed offense. Perhaps. It’s a conversation worth having.
I am not for a moment suggesting we substitute race or gender for the other proximate causes of this tragedy: lax gun laws, mental illness. I am arguing only that we can never fully understand it, unless we also add these elements to our equation. Without them, the story is entirely about him, the shooter. But the bigger story is also about us.
In the coming weeks, we’ll learn more about Adam Lanza, his motives, his particular madness. We’ll hear how he “snapped” or that he was seriously mentally ill. We’ll try to explain it by setting him apart, by distancing him from the rest of us.
And we’ll continue to miss the point. Not only are those children at Sandy Hook Elementary School our children. Adam Lanza is our child also. Of course, he was mad — as were Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, and Seung-Hui Cho, Jared Lee Loughner, James Eagan Holmes, and Wade Michael Page — and the ever-longer list of boys and young men who have exploded in a paroxysm of vengeful violence in recent years. In a sense, they weren’t deviants, but over-conformists to norms of masculinity that prescribe violence as a solution. Like real men, they didn’t just get mad, they got even. Until we transform that definition of manhood, this terrible equation of masculinity and violence will continue to produce such horrific sums.
————————
Michael Kimmel is a professor of sociology at the State University of New York at Stonybrook. He has written or edited over twenty volumes, including Manhood in America: A Cultural History and Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men. You can visit his website here.
Comments 51
glaborous_immolate — December 20, 2012
"How does masculinity figure into this? From an early age, boys learn that violence is not only an acceptable form of conflict resolution, but one that is admired. However the belief that violence is an inherently male characteristic is a fallacy. Most boys don’t carry weapons, and almost all don’t kill: are they not boys? Boys learn it.
They learn it from their fathers. They learn it from a media that glorifies it, from sports heroes who commit felonies and get big contracts, from a culture saturated in images of heroic and redemptive violence. They learn it from each other.
In talking to more than 400 young men for my book, Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men, I heard over and over again what they learn about violence. They learn that if they are crossed, they have the manly obligation to fight back."
There is a very large an popular religion in America and the west who's male founder 1) refused to use any weapons to defend his own life from a murderer 2) told his followers to turn the other cheek when slapped. A subsequent follower of this founder told other followers that the religion would use only 'spiritual weapons" against arguments and other pockets of resistance, and though he affirmed the legitimacy of state violence against evildoers, he did not mandate personal retaliation, leaving that up to God and the Founder who he claimed would return to judge all men.
So for many men who are followers of this religion, they know quite well the way of the world is violent by default, and while they might affirm it in certain cases, they do not hold that masculinity is defined by it, when the male human who founded their religion is claimed to be perfect in every regard and an ideal human and male.
FWIW, If Lanza 'snapped" and turned to violence because a woman was going to have him committed to a mental institution one should note that involuntary committement is a form of violence as well, as physical steps will be taken to stop someone from leaving such a place.
If lanza is looking for a 'solution' to not being violently committed to an institution what alternatives are there for him?
glaborous_immolate — December 20, 2012
'If the shooter were black and the school urban, we’d hear about the culture of poverty; about how inner-city life breeds crime and violence; perhaps even some theories about a purported tendency among blacks towards violence."
I think this is missing a big component of what is discussed and understood about violent black males in poverty: There is a LOT about how the poverty of black life leads to a need to find 'respect' and a sense of purpose in the SAME kind of masculinity that you purport is only a feature of white young male life. Gang A goes to war against Gang B because of a slight or "diss"respect done to it or a member. A blaxck youth buys a gun to feel empowered. so I don't think the discourse black vs white on this issue is so dichotomized though maybe too many people are thinking of it in 2 compartments: its really similar.
glaborous_immolate — December 20, 2012
If I "learn" from my father that it is my duty, as a man, to protect my family from violent harm by responding, if necessary, in kind, and then i go through life an nobody ever attacks my family, have we proved that violence is not inherently masculine because I am an example of a man who never USED violence?
(" belief that violence is an inherently male characteristic is a fallacy. Most boys don’t carry weapons, and almost all don’t kill:") seems specious when you consider that context. Many american soldiers never fought in battle, or killed anyone in battle. Does that mean that fighting in battle is not an inherent part of a soldier's duty?
Yrro Simyarin — December 20, 2012
The murder rate in the UK was 3 times lower than in the US *before* they passed their gun ban, too.
AnnieDeMotta — December 20, 2012
This is a very interesting take on the situation. The best thing about your
interpretation is that it is not reductive. You include masculinity into the
mix and indicate that causes of Adam Lanza’s actions were complex and multifaceted.
I am an adult with Asperger’s and a graduate student at the University of Maine studying disability, philosophy and gender studies. I wrote this blog as a reaction to the media’s portrayal of Adam Lanza and the role of Asperger’s in this shooting. Please read and share. http://thumos29.wordpress.com/2012/12/17/i-am-not-adam-lanza/
Anna — December 20, 2012
"From an early age, boys learn that violence is not only an acceptable form of conflict resolution, but one that is admired."
There is an additional dimension to masculinity and violence: that of the way men are conditioned to respond to
violence. Boys also learn from an early age that they must respond to violence by protecting others from harm. Part of this entails learning that retaliative violence is a dignified and/or justified response to threat, or even the mere perception of threat.
But another part of it is also learning that they must make themselves vulnerable and put themselves in the line of fire (not necessarily literally, although in the case of gunshots, the metaphor fits). That, too, is part of learning be a "real man". A widely cited and recent example is the 3 men who died shielding their girlfriends during the Colorado cinema shootings. There ensued a discussion on many comments sections and blogs criticising how the media framed their heroism as a masculine proclivity for protection. It was very uncomfortable, at times downright distasteful, but perhaps an inevitable discussion if we are to try to disentangle the ideals of manhood with violence.
Note: I am not talking about nature, about a masculine "instinct". I am trying to add the dimension of response to violence to Kimmel's discussion of a cultural conditioning for violence and its link to masculinity.
glaborous_immolate — December 20, 2012
"Son, you may need to use violence to protect a weaker person, or even yourself from malicious people. Its only a last resort, and should never be done lightly"
"son, why did you kill helpless 6 year olds"
"well dad, I was over-conforming to your admission that violence was a necessary part of life."
glaborous_immolate — December 20, 2012
"I am not for a moment suggesting we substitute race or gender for the other proximate causes of this tragedy: lax gun laws, mental illness. "
BUT
"we continue to miss other crucial variables — even though they are staring right back at us when we look at that photograph. Adam Lanza was a middle class white guy."
So what's a CRUCIAL VARIABLE is his gender and race, (and class, i guess). But don't substitute that for less crucial variables like gun laws and mental illness.
This article gets sillier every time i re-read it.
hey why don't RICH white boys kill whole schoolrooms? If we could figure that out we could prevent it maybe. Is it because rich boys are wimps?
Gman E Willikers — December 20, 2012
The feminist argument that commonly associated cultural norms of masculinity are inherently evil and specifically contributory to the social ill on point seems to fall apart in light of the fact that the preponderance of these mass shootings are perpetrated by white males, and mostly middle-class white males at that. Although the aggressive masculinity that is being targeted for social re-engineering is not absent from the middle class white male upbringing, there is culturally less emphasis on being a "macho man" and more emphasis on being an educated man who follows the rules. The assumption of this privileged class of white males is that following the rules will help ensure success while breaking the rules will have adverse consequences. That is not so true of unprivileged non-white males, who in many cases are conditioned to believe that the rules are only meant to keep them down.
I am not arguing in support of the current hyper-masculinity and hyper-sexuality driven by the media. I think that is terribly damaging to young men as it tends to divert energy from education as a means to success. Do we really think this dangerous media driven trend is being absorbed more by middle-class white males than any other cohort?
Mouse — December 21, 2012
What I find intriguing is that when the victims are PoC, no one ever shouts "this wouldn't have happened if they had a gun too!" the way people are about the schoolteachers.
Thealexstewart — December 21, 2012
I'm not going to lie, I don't know how to respond to this post other than to say that I don't think it is a fair article at all. If we look at the statistics of those serving in our military as well we will see the exact same demographic as those who are supposedly most likely to go on a shooting rampage. So taking the exact same supposed "logical" All-or-Nothing stance that this article does, White middle class males are also some of the most likely demographic to be heroic and self-sacrificial in America. I do not necessarily believe that, but I could easily argue it exactly the way this article argues, in a seemingly subtle way, that there is something extraordinary about this demographic of male. I'm sorry to be that guy, but I find this article to be racist, sexist, classist, and holistically biased against many, many people. Just my thoughts... Sorry to soapbox :)
Jared — December 21, 2012
mental illness has, like, nothing to do with this. stop stigmatizing me dude.
Matthew — December 21, 2012
Beyond the military and sports, what socially acceptable venues do we provide for boys to "prove their masculinity"?
Gil Jones — December 21, 2012
Let's hit the correct target, i.e. locate the REAL WHY, handle it, and America's statistics will boom again. Our stats have steadily declined since WWII because of "The Three Amigos," psychiatry, psychology and
psychoanalysis, + Big Pharma.
Stats in education, legal, and social services, plummet from their false data and ineptness. They are an "Industry of Death." Target them & fire, outlaw their 'mental health,' sue them into oblivion.
Go here http://www.scientology.org/fundamentals-of-thought/videos.html
click "Online Courses." Ignore guns, target the operator with these courses! Lock & load...Semper Fi
Larry Arnold — December 21, 2012
"They learn it from their fathers. They learn it from a media that glorifies it, from sports heroes who commit felonies and get big contracts, from a culture saturated in images of heroic and redemptive violence. They learn it from each other."
That may be what my generation learned. But today's young men grew up in a school system that preached "violence is never an acceptable response for anything." They grew up in "gun-free" school zones under "zero tolerance for violence" policies where a senior high honor student will be expelled if she accidentally looses a butter knife behind the seat of her car.
So if you're being bullied, don't fight back, call a teacher who will punish both participants. If you have a child who flies into rages call on the mental health system, who will only respond after he kills someone. Or many someones.
Meanwhile, since 1986, while concealed carry expanded from 10% of the population to 70%, and "assault weapons" became the most popular sporting rifles, the U.S. violent crime rate has dropped by 1/3rd, from over 600/100k to 400/100k.
One of the few crimes that isn't decreasing are these rare mass shootings, which occur precisely where firearms are LEAST available.
It's not rocket science.
Larry Arnold — December 21, 2012
"The chorus of gun boosters has defensively chimed in about how gun control would not have prevented this."
According to the Brady folks, Connecticut has the fifth most restrictive gun laws in the U.S. It's one of only five states that have passed more than half of the Brady gun control agenda. None of the guns used came from outside the state, which already has an "assault weapon" ban, licensing, and all the other laws that are supposed to prevent the next shooting.
So we aren't saying gun control WOULD not have prevented the Sandy Hook shooting; we're saying that it DID not prevent it. Again.
Strobel — December 21, 2012
A homosexual like Lanza will always be insecure about his masculinity.
random — December 22, 2012
I think this common analysis of blaming white men, guns, and mental health without a macro view misses the mark.What is the root cause of this tragedy and why isn't the Left talking about it?The reaction to the Connecticut killings demonstrates the need for the Western Left to reevaluate itself, and to remember that it was once a potent force, in order to become one again. I discuss it indepth here:http://alexfelipe.wordpress.com/2012/12/22/the-lefts-failure-post-newtown-connecticut/
SageDave — December 23, 2012
The suggestion that women are not involved in mass killings is simply untrue. It is true that women do not prefer firearms when committing murder, but they do. Too many "Black Widows," Angle Killers" and alike to say differently.
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