The Mythic West in Twentieth-Century America
Robert G. Athearn
Foreword by Elliott West
xii, 324 pages, 54 photographs, 1 map, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0377-0, $14.95
WINNER OF THE NATIONAL COWBOY HALL OF FAME WESTERN HERITAGE
AWARD
"Just what and where is the
West? Why have so many been so obsessed with finding and saving
that mythic time and place? What has the West meant to those
who have lived there and to the millions more who have journeyed
there only in their imaginations? And how have the answers to
these questions changed with the years? The issues involved here--the
place of the West and the frontier experience in our search for
a national identity--have inspired a small library of important
books during the last thirty years or so. Most of these writers
have given their attention to those confident and aggressive
years of the nineteenth century when the frontier was sweeping
across the continent.
"Athearn's contribution, in part, is to pursue the shifting
perceptions of the West into the present century. There the story
has taken new twists as Americans have confronted hard lessons
about themselves and their land. Again and again the message
of events has been much the same: We are running short of resources
and of room to grow. The region that once seemed endlessly bountiful
and forever wild has become a land of narrowing limits. With
this realization, popular feelings about the West, 'the most
American part of America,' have swung erratically between hope
and disillusionment, affection and anger. Yet the myth has survived,
however battered and bent into new shapes. . . .
"The Mythic West is by no means meant as a full
treatment of its subject. Instead Athearn uses each chapter to
consider from a different angle certain developments that have
shaped the modern West and some of the ways these transformations
have in turn molded what people have thought and dreamed about
that land. . . . It is informed by his characteristic intelligence
and graced by the humor and felicity of style his readers have
come to expect. As do his other works, it leaves us with a deeper,
richer understanding of that elusive and complex place, the West,
which he knew as well as anyone ever will."--from the
Foreword
"This excellent book was the last one written by Robert
G. Athearn, a foremost historian of the high country frontier
who helped shape and train a generation of scholars. . . . His
final statement is a blend of personal observation and scholarship.
[It] is also an intelligent, witty account of the western mystique
by one of its great devotees."--Journal of American
History
"The best interpretative study of the twentieth-century
American West to date: it is informed, witty, personal. . . .
This is high country history at its best."--Martin Ridge,
coauthor of Westward Expansion
"Treat yourself to a really readable and wise book if
you have any interest in what it means to be Western, or in what
other people think it means."--Denver Post
"Spirited and witty. Told with poise and affection."--Washington
Post Book World
"One of the most delightful, thoughtful, penetrating,
and knowledgeable books on the American West. . . . A real love
affair, and a joy to read."--Alvin M. Josephy, Jr.,
author of Now That the Buffalo's Gone
"Magnificent. . . . This book is a must for anyone interested
in understanding the recent history of a major portion of the
American West."--Howard R. Lamar in Colorado Heritage
"A fine portrait of the recent West: its booms
and busts, its enormous rearrangements of population, its endless
search for a settled identity, and its chronic tension over wanting
outside help and resisting outside control."--Western
Historical Quarterly
"An engaging social history."--Publishers
Weekly
"An exceptional book. . . . [Recommended for] all libraries."--Choice
ROBERT G. ATHEARN, one of the West's most prominent
and beloved historians, was the recipient of the Western History
Association's first award for a distinguished body of writing
on western history. Among his many books are The Coloradans,
Rebel of the Rockies, William Tecumseh Sherman and the Settlement
of the West, and High Country Empire: The High Plains
and the Rockies.
ELLIOTT WEST, professor of history at the University
of Arkansas, is the author of The Contested
Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado.
He is also coeditor of Small Worlds:
Children and Adolescents in America, 1850-1950.
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