
Writing
Joe lbelieves the written word has the potential to change our reality if used skilfully. He recently published a book through Routledge based on his PhD research. You can also read his publications, poetry, and philosophical musings below.
Published Work
Anderson, J. 2024. Gun Rights Activists and the US Culture War: Embodied fantasies of the ethical warrior in contemporary gun culture, Routledge: New York
Chandler, A., Huque, S., Helman, R., Anderson, J., Yue, E. 2023. “Embodiment and space in understandings of suicide and self-harm”, in Embodied Spaces, edited by, Routledge: London
Chandler, A, Anderson, J, Helman, R., Huque, S., Yue, E. 2022. “Reimagining Suicide Research: The Limits and Possibilities of Suicide Cultures”, Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective, 11 (10): 20 – 28
Anderson, J. 2022. “Suicidescapes: How we are mapping the cultures and contexts in which suicide occurs”, Suicide Cultures Blog
Anderson, J. 2021. “The Extraordinary Ethics of Self-Defence: Embodied Vulnerability and Gun Rights in the United States”, Ethnos,
Anderson, J. 2021. “What do we mean when we speak of Suicide Cultures?” The Suicide Cultures Blog
Anderson, J. 2020. “A Gun for the End of the World: How rising firearm purchases will impact the 2020 election”, Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Critical Care.
Anderson, J. 2018. “We Need to Talk About Gun Violence: Reflections on Terminology and Contexts of Violence”, Somatosphere, Part of the series Notes on Gun Violence.
Anderson, J. 2017. “Gun Owners, Ethics, and the Problem of Evil: A Response to the Las Vegas Shooting”, Hau; Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 7 (3), 39 – 48
Anderson, J. 2016. “Book Review: Cold War Anthropology: The CIA, The Pentagon and the Growth of Dual Use Anthropology by David H. Price”, LSE Review of Books
Anderson, J. 2015. "An Anthropology of US Gun Culture; The Productive Tension Between Ideology and Embodiment”, Groundings Ancients Journal, 3