The politics of popular westerns are surprising in substance and
significance, especially of late. Cowboy Politics shows how westerns
in literature, cinema, and television face the challenges of Western
Civilization even more than the perils of American frontiers. Its
strategy is to compare key westerns with major theories of modern and
postmodern politics. So it analyzes novels from Owen Wister to Zane
Grey and Larry McMurtry. It focuses on films from the western revival
beginning in the 1990s and featuring Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven,
while its interest in TV stretches from singing cowboys and Gunsmoke
to David Milch’s Deadwood. Critics are apt to find in westerns the
modern politics of Thomas Hobbes and John Locke. They tap devices of
individuality, rationality, contract, sovereign enforcement, and
representation to overcome the chaotic violence of a wild zone. Cowboy
Politics examines how westerns often find such measures insufficient
to tame the West as a culture of honor and anger that deteriorates
into feud-al vengeance. Instead westerns see the West as the sunset
land that is already growing old and moving on. So westerns seek fresh
starts informed by comparing civilizations more than demonizing
savages. Westerns worry that modern politics devolve into
exploitation, oppression, spectacle, and terror. So they pursue
supplements in such postmodern politics as republicanism,
perfectionism, populism, feminism, and environmentalism. Especially
westerns explore politics of persuasive speech-in-action-in-public,
doing beauty, and self-reliance in the modes of Hannah Arendt and
Ralph Waldo Emerson. The first two chapters of Cowboy Politics explain
how westerns do political theory for popular audiences by making many
of our myths: the symbolic stories of individuals and communities
which we live daily. The next three chapters trace the initially
modern theories of government in many westerns. Then western turns to
republican honor, rhetoric, response-ability, and character tracking
occupy the following four chapters. And these set the stage for
another four chapters on western attention to postmodern terror,
mythmaking, celebrity, spectacle, and forgiveness. The final two
chapters analyze how “late,” “satirical,” and
“transformative” westerns develop realist defenses for their
surprisingly postmodern politics.
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Myths and Discourses in Popular Westerns from The Virginian to Unforgiven and Deadwood
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781498549486
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Lexington Books
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter