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Book cover of Playing cowboys
Literary Criticism - General & Miscellaneous, Western Films, American Literature - Regional Literature - Literary Criticism, Westerns - Literary Criticism

Playing cowboys

by Robert Murray Davis
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Overview

In Playing Cowboys, Robert Murray Davis examines the Western hero--a principal image of American manhood since publication of The Virginian--as portrayed by a variety of post-World War II novelists and filmmakers. Innovative artists have used the Western to discuss issues of ethics and aesthetics, but its greatest impact may have been on popular cultural values. Davis shows that the Western is not primarily about escape or violence, but, at its best, is about development. The would-be hero adopts the existing role only to find it inadequate, and, forced to "reimagine" himself, he defines the Western hero anew. At the core of this process is strength--not power over others, but courage to go beyond the established boundaries. Although women do appear in the Western (often as proponents of "civilization"), it is fundamentally a man's world, offering an important view of male identity. Focusing on The Virginian, chapter 1 explores the origin of the Western hero and the source of the genre's major plots and issues. Chapter 2 evaluates history, myth, and the relative reality of the two in the works of Oakley Hall. Citing the novels of Richard Brautigan, E. L. Doctorow, John Hawkes, and Michael Ondaatje, chapter 3 compares the Western and the gothic novel, focusing on the concept of space. These works portray the West as a wasteland devoid of any vitality, but chapter 4 takes up science fiction Westerns (including works by John Jakes, John Boyd, and Robert Sheckley) that use the Western frontier to ironic and liberating effect. Chapter 5, on the motion picture Blazing Saddles and the postmodern Western novels of Ishmael Reed and Alvin Greenberg, examines the role-playing by which identity is created. And in his Preface, Introduction, and Epilogue, Davis frames these discussions with personal observations on the West and its relation to the American masculine mystique. For those interested in Western movies or novels, popular culture, gender studies, or literary criti

About the Author, Robert Murray Davis

Robert Murray Davis, who holds a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is Professor of English in the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of numerous critical works on Evelyn Waugh, and his most recent book is Mid-Lands: A Family Album, a recollection of his youth and young adulthood in Boonville, Missouri.

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Booknews

Davis (English, U. of Oklahoma) examines the Western hero--a principal image of American manhood since publication of The Virginian--as portrayed by a variety of post-World War II novelists and filmmakers. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
April 30, 1992
Publisher
Norman : University of Oklahoma Press, c1992.
Pages
192
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780806124025

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