TY - JOUR
T1 - “You Can't Always Run Away”: Gender Reflexivity and Personal Firearms Ownership among Civilian Women Gun Owners in Israel
T2 - Gender Reflexivity and Personal Firearms Ownership among Civilian Women Gun Owners in Israel
AU - Ben-Shalom, Uzi
AU - Maor, Maya
AU - Stern, Nehemia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Sociological Inquiry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alpha Kappa Delta: The International Sociology Honor Society.
PY - 2025/8/1
Y1 - 2025/8/1
N2 - This article explores the interplay between the nation-state, gender, and security by exploring embodied experiences of Israeli women gun owners. Growing skepticism toward Israel's historically state-centric security model has driven a significant increase in women's personal handgun ownership, disrupting and reconfiguring traditional gender identities. As the state's monopoly on public security erodes, armed women increasingly take on the role of protectors for themselves and their families. This shift broadens the spectrum of gendered practices tied to firearms, security, and Israeli citizenship. Based on 17 in-depth qualitative interviews, we demonstrate how armed women draw on and transform elements of traditional feminine expression by melding notions of feminine dress, motherhood, and firearms equality. This study contributes to theoretical discourse on gender performativity and firearms by demonstrating how private gun ownership does not wholly subvert dominant masculine forms of Israeli militarization, but rather functions to construct a new grammar and vocabulary of feminine performances around both firearms ownership and Israeli gendered citizenship.
AB - This article explores the interplay between the nation-state, gender, and security by exploring embodied experiences of Israeli women gun owners. Growing skepticism toward Israel's historically state-centric security model has driven a significant increase in women's personal handgun ownership, disrupting and reconfiguring traditional gender identities. As the state's monopoly on public security erodes, armed women increasingly take on the role of protectors for themselves and their families. This shift broadens the spectrum of gendered practices tied to firearms, security, and Israeli citizenship. Based on 17 in-depth qualitative interviews, we demonstrate how armed women draw on and transform elements of traditional feminine expression by melding notions of feminine dress, motherhood, and firearms equality. This study contributes to theoretical discourse on gender performativity and firearms by demonstrating how private gun ownership does not wholly subvert dominant masculine forms of Israeli militarization, but rather functions to construct a new grammar and vocabulary of feminine performances around both firearms ownership and Israeli gendered citizenship.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012262701
U2 - 10.1111/soin.70025
DO - 10.1111/soin.70025
M3 - Article
SN - 0038-0245
JO - Sociological Inquiry
JF - Sociological Inquiry
ER -