Kansas and the West
New Perspectives
Edited by Rita Napier
March 2003
392 pages, 3 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1231-4, $40.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1232-1, $19.95
Kansas
is steeped in the lore and legends of the Old West--from Dodge City
to the Dust Bowl days. But, as these authors show, that leaves out
a lot of state history.
Drawing on scholarship that has transformed our understanding of
the history of both state and region, Kansas and the West
introduces readers to a wide range of people, places, and themes
that demonstrate the complex relationships among race, class, gender,
and environment. In so doing, it also puts to rest many of the myths
that have dominated western history for so long, reflecting both
the positive and the negative consequences of human actions over
150 years of Kansas history.
The collection gathers eighteen key writings that take readers
through three eras. The dispossession and resettlement of Native
Americans is seen in such pieces as Elliot Wests Story
of Three Families and Richard Whites Cultural
Landscape of the Pawnees. The nineteenth-century evolution
from Bleeding Kansas to a modern state is seen in works
ranging from writings on the Civil War era by Bill Cecil-Fronsman
and Richard Sheridan to observations on road improvements by Paul
Sutter. And selected aspects of Kansas in the twentieth century
are seen in such contributions as Donald Worsters controversial
views on the Dust Bowl, Mary Dudziaks article on desegregation
in 1950s Topeka, and a look at labor in the beefpacking industry
by Donald Stull and Michael Broadway.
By incorporating voices from history that have too long been lost
in the din of tradition--especially the voices of Native Americans
and blacks, women and laborers--Kansas and the West provides
a provocative and much-needed new view of the states past.
A book that will prove fascinating for general readers, instructive
for students, and an invaluable touchstone for scholars, it brings
us different stories, new actors, and fresh images that challenge
some of our most cherished views of the West--and in the process
shows us that complexity and diversity have always characterized
what we have habitually thought of as simpler times.
Kansas turns out to be as fertile ground for innovative
historical essays as it has been for advancing social change.
Some of these are already modern regional classics. All expand
our idea of what a Kansan was and is.--Craig Miner,
author of Kansas: The History of the Sunflower State, 18542000
A compelling, fresh look at Kansas that convincingly challenges
old assumptions and provides insightful new perspectives.--Paul
Stuewe, editor of Kansas Revisited
A fine volume that fills a void in the literature and that
I can enthusiastically adopt as the main text for my Kansas history
class.--Virgil Dean, editor of Kansas History
A significant and cutting-edge contribution to the fields
of western history and state history.--John Wunder,
author of Americans View Their Dustbowl Experience
RITA NAPIER is associate professor of American history at
the University of Kansas and author of The Peoples of Kansas.
CONTRIBUTORS: Michael J. Broadway, James C. Carper, Bill
Cecil-Fronsman, Mary L. Dudziak, Thomas Frank, Michael Goldberg,
Joseph B. Herring, Angel Kwolek-Folland, Rita Napier, Robert Oppenheimer,
Ann Schofield, Richard Sheridan, Caron Smith, Donald D. Stull, Paul
Sutter, Eleanor Turk, Elliott West, Richard White, Donald Worster
|