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Author Lamont, Victoria, author.

Title Westerns : a women's history / Victoria Lamont.

Publication Info. Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2016]
©2016

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  813.087409 L191w 2016    ---  Axe Inventory 2024
1 copy being processed for Axe Acquisitions Order.
Description xii, 194 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series Postwestern horizons
Postwestern horizons.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 161-181) and index.
Contents Western violence and the limits of sentimental power -- Domestic politics and cattle rustling -- Women's westerns and the myth of the pseudonym -- Why Mourning Dove wrote a Western -- Cattle branding and the traffic in women -- The masculinization of the Western.
Summary "At every turn in the development of what we now know as the western, women writers have been instrumental in its formation. Yet the myth that the western is male-authored persists. Westerns: A Women's History debunks this myth once and for all by recovering the women writers of popular westerns who were active during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when the western genre as we now know it emerged. Victoria Lamont offers detailed studies of some of the many women who helped shape the western. Their novels bear the classic hallmarks of the western--cowboys, schoolmarms, gun violence, lynchings, cattle branding--while also placing female characters at the center of their western adventures and improvising with western conventions in surprising and ingenious ways. In Emma Ghent Curtis's The Administratrix a widow disguises herself as a cowboy and infiltrates the cowboy gang responsible for lynching her husband. Muriel Newhall's pulp serial character, Sheriff Minnie, comes to the rescue of a steady stream of defenseless female victims. B.M. Bower, Katharine Newlin Burt, and Frances McElrath use cattle branding as a metaphor for their feminist critiques of patriarchy. In addition to recovering the work of these and other women authors of popular westerns, Lamont uses original archival analysis of the western-fiction publishing scene to overturn the long-standing myth of the western as a male-dominated genre"--The publisher.
Subject Western stories -- Women authors.
Western stories -- History and criticism.
Western stories. (OCoLC)fst01174081
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc. (OCoLC)fst01411635
ISBN 9780803237629
0803237626
Standard No. 9780803237629

 
    
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