Under an Open Sky: Rethinking America's Western Past

Front Cover
William Cronon, George A. Miles, Jay Gitlin
W. W. Norton & Company, 1993 - 354 pages
The history of the American West is being transformed by exciting new ideas, new questions, new scholarship. For many years this field was dominated by popular images of the lone cowboy and the savage Indian, and by Frederick Jackson Turner's concept of the frontier as a steadily advancing source of democracy and social renewal. But now historians and even the merchants of popular culture are reshaping our views of the frontier and the West by taking up a rich array of new subjects, including the stories of diverse peoples as well as the history of the land itself. A new generation of scholars is reformulating the broader questions also: What was the significance of the frontier in American history? What are the bases of western identity? What themes connect the twentieth-century West to its more distant past? The transformation of western history continues to be an open-ended, turbulent process. The original essays in this volume are reports from the frontier of change. In their diverging assumptions and conclusions, they reflect the vitality of this field. They succeed when they make the case for new questions and suggest possible answers. They advocate no single agenda. But taken together they well represent the passion and high craft with which scholars are creating a new western history.
 

Contents

The Paths out of Town
28
Rediscovering Native Americans
52
Connecting the West
71
A Community Approach
90
Race Relations in the West
110
Engendering the West
132
Religion in the American West
145
Verbal Activity
167
Western Art and Western History
185
Four Layers of History
203
Commercializing
223
Is There a TwentiethCentury West?
239
Speculations
257
NOTES
275
CONTRIBUTORS
343
Copyright

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About the author (1993)

William Cronon is Frederick Jackson Turner Professor of History, Geography, and Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

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