Straight White American Jesus

Myths of Violence: How Guns Became Sacred in America

Dec 15, 2025
Dr. Rachel Wagner, a Professor of Religious Studies and author of Cowboy Apocalypse, delves into the troubling intersection of gun culture, religion, and masculinity in America. She explores how firearms have evolved into sacred symbols tied to apocalyptic narratives and notions of protection. Wagner discusses the NRA's transformation into a quasi-religious force and the cowboy messiah myth that shapes societal views on violence. The conversation highlights how these narratives simplify history and breed dehumanization, culminating in events like January 6 being seen as performative acts of violence.
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INSIGHT

Cowboy Apocalypse Defined

  • The 'cowboy apocalypse' is a cultural myth that fuses frontier nostalgia with apocalyptic fear.
  • It imagines a lone white hero with a gun restoring order by violent means.
INSIGHT

Good Guy Myth Replaces Due Process

  • The 'good guy with a gun' becomes a micro-myth where a white man assumes the judge's role.
  • That myth shuts down dialogue and centers violence as legit governance.
ANECDOTE

Slow Cooker As Cultural Symbol

  • Brad Onishi uses a slow cooker story to show how objects carry cultural meanings.
  • He compares domestic nostalgia to how guns become rites of passage for some families.
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