'This is a fascinating story of transgression and technology. Recounting the social processes through which weapons shift from the mundane to the taboo, Abbenhuis offers a comprehensive history of the dum-dum bullet. This is a sophisticated cultural analysis of a simple and mundane socio-technical system. With so little academic attention paid to the evolution of ammunition, it is a reminder to scholars that what is overlooked often has a rich and world-changing story. Heartily recommended.' Matthew Ford, author of Weapon of Choice 'Maartje Abbenhuis has written a jaw-dropping history of a bullet that changed the way we think about lethal violence, both on and off the battlefield. It asks us to reflect on transgression and technology, international norms and laws, and what it means to kill and be killed.' Joanna Bourke, author of Wounding the World 'What is a transgressive weapon? Why are some ways to maim and kill acceptable, whilst others are not? These are the questions that Maartje Abbenhuis seeks to unpick in this groundbreaking new book. In particular, Abbenhuis moves beyond the traditional foci of these arguments on law and technology to explore the cultural creation of transgression. The book examines the way dum-dum bullets were discussed and presented in the Anglo-European media environment in an effort to unpick the interrelationships between culture, technology, and international law. By focusing on a mundane technology Abbenhuis also tells the story of every day violence spanning time, continents and even species, and in doing so highlights some of the paradoxes in international restrictions on technologies that were, and continue to be, consistently used across the globe on a daily basis.' Richard Dunley, author of Britain and the Mine 19001915