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The Wrong Hands - Popular Weapons Manuals and Their Historic Challenges to a Democratic Society (Hardcover)
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The Wrong Hands - Popular Weapons Manuals and Their Historic Challenges to a Democratic Society (Hardcover)
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In 1885, there was The Science of Revolutionary Warfare. In 1971,
there was The Anarchist Cookbook. In 2012, the Boston Marathon
bombers turned to the Internet to learn how to make explosives. For
well over a century, the United States government has regarded the
circulation of weapons manuals and instruction booklets by radicals
as not only dangerous, but criminal. In The Wrong Hands, Ann
Larabee traces the nuanced history of do-it-yourself weapons
manuals from the late nineteenth century to the present to explain
the trajectory of violent radicalism and how it provokes the
state's evolving policy toward radical dissent. Larabee begins with
Johann Most's The Science of Revolutionary Warfare, which allegedly
served as a cookbook for the accused Haymarket Square bombers of
1886. The judge at the Haymarket trial allowed it to be admitted as
evidence, setting a precedent for prosecutorial use of such texts
against radicals. Health Is in You!, a bombmaking guide circulated
by Italian anarchists, further attracted the attention of federal
police, and sabotage books were introduced in show trials of labor
activists. In the 1960s, small paramilitary publishers produced
instructions, largely drawn from US military sources, to cater to a
growing popular interest in do-it-yourself weapons making.
Published in 1971, The Anarchist Cookbook achieved legendary status
and a lasting presence in the courts. The book's critics
immediately connected it to the wave of bombings by left-wing
radicals of the era, particularly the Weather Underground.
Novelistic instructions for bombmaking, as in Edward Abbey's The
Monkey Wrench Gang and William Pierce's The Turner Diaries,
provided controversial evidence in prosecutions of radicals on the
left and right, including Earth Firsters and Timothy McVeigh. Over
the last twenty years, sites have proliferated online explaining
how to make weapons, including suicide vests, and older print
instructions have been digitized. The struggle over the state's
responsibility to police such information has long hinged on
whether its disseminators are legitimate. An unevenly applied
federal terror policy has increased the penalties for possessing
popular weapons instructions if those instructions end up in 'the
wrong hands' like right-wing militia figures and jihadists
(including the Boston Marathon bombers). Larabee ends with an
analysis of the 1979 publication of instructions to make a nuclear
weapon, which raises the ultimate question: can a society committed
to free speech allow these sorts of manuals to disseminate freely?
A comprehensive account of an alarming yet persistent historical
phenomenon, The Wrong Hands will reshape our understanding of
radical violence and state repression in American history.
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