This section contains 16,798 words (approx. 56 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “The Cowboy Hero: An American Myth Examined,” in The American Cowboy, by Lonn Taylor and Ingrid Maar, Harper and Row, 1983, pp. 63‐79.
In the following essay, Taylor examines the rise of the traditional cowboy persona over the course of the nineteenth century, focusing on the evolving depictions of the cowboy in popular culture. Taylor theorizes that America's perception of itself can be traced through the years by examining the changing image of the cowboy.
During the middle years of the nineteenth century—the four decades divided by the Civil War—a series of changes took place that profoundly altered the fabric of everyday life in America and, consequently, the way in which Americans thought about their country and its future. During those forty years, a federation of states in which life for most people was rural and agrarian became a nation whose future was irrevocably urban and industrial...
This section contains 16,798 words (approx. 56 pages at 300 words per page) |