Artifact

Encounters with the Campus Shooting Archives
West Virginia University Press
West Virginia University Press
9781959000587
$18.99
Paperback
2025-10-01
2025-10-01
Julija Šukys examines a series of five North American university and college campus shootings between 1966 and 2015: the École Polytechnique in Montreal, Concordia University in Montreal, Virginia Tech, University of Alabama–Huntsville, and Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon. These attacks involved students and faculty as both victims and perpetrators—that is, all the shooters were either faculty members or (in one case, would-be) students of the institution where the killings took place.
Šukys arrives at each site long after the killings have taken place: by now, the teddy bears, flowers, and crosses have been cleared away. Prying journalists are long gone. She sorts through myriad objects left at makeshift memorial sites. She talks for hours with a professor who survived an attack only because her colleague’s gun jammed as it was pointed at her head. She wanders and documents the reconfigured buildings made unrecognizable after the horrors that occurred within them. She reads tedious court transcripts, officious government-commissioned reports, and a troubling memoir written by a shooter’s mother and sifts through the mathematics papers that one campus shooter publishes from his prison cell.
Artifact weighs what it means to live in a place where students and their teachers are gunned down on a seemingly regular basis. It asks how we can continue to learn, teach, and live when nothing changes in response to these deaths. It attempts to speak into silence, to look at the pain of those who have come through trauma, and to meet their gazes without platitudes or triumphalism. The result is a searching book about care, memory, forgiveness, and survival.
5.000in x 8.000in x 0.500in
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“Making the archives palpable is what Šukys is trying to do in Artifact. By locating us in the place—whether in the library, in the archives, in conversation with a victim, or in the room with a shooter, Šukys invites the reader to stay longer at the scene.”
—Nicole Walker, author of Sustainability: A Love Story; Processed Meats: Essays on Food, Flesh, and Navigating Disaster; Egg; and Micrograms. She is professor of English and MFA program director at Northern Arizona University.
“An elegant mixture of the personal and the historical. Šukys’s engaging journey invites the reader to feel the pull of the archive, and the many twists and turns of the search.”
—Philip Nel, author of How to Draw the World: Harold and the Purple Crayon and the Making of a Children’s Classic and university distinguished professor of English at Kansas State University.
176 Pages
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