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Real Men Use Nonlethals: Appeals To Masculinity in Marketing Police Weaponry
Jesse Wozniak*
and
Christopher Uggen
University of Minnesota
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: wozni019{at}umn.edu.
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Abstract |
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In recent years, a range of new nonlethal weapons have been introduced for use by police officers, military personnel, and other consumers. This article examines how manufacturers are employing ideals of masculinity as both physical dominance and technical expertise in marketing these weapons to police officials. Based on a case study of a major weapons manufacturers educational and sales conference, the authors explore how marketing appeals are adapted to suit a hypermasculine police subculture. Connells theory of masculinities is employed to understand how such a tightly defined subculture absorbs challenges to its core values of hegemonic hypermasculinity and reimagines itself to keep those core values intact.
First published on April 20, 2009, doi:10.1177/1557085109332676
Feminist Criminology 2009;4:275.
A more recent version of this article appeared on July 1, 2009

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