Fredrick Jackson Turner Frontier Thesis Summary

431 Words1 Page

These “terms” had been laid out for over 100 years through art, literature, film and public discourse. Many discussions of the West in the collective imagination inevitably begin with Fredrick Jackson Turner and his influential essay The significance of the Frontier in American History, commonly referred to as the Frontier Thesis (in fn both the catalogue and under an open sky begin by referencing Turner). Turner’s seminal work was presented almost 100 years before TWAA at the 1893 World’s Fair, just three years after the 1890 census declared that the frontier was closed. Turner’s work was not necessarily original but is the most coherent and influential articulation of the phenomenon. The frontier was defined as a continuously westward moving line of European settlement, “where savage met civilisation” in crude, nineteenth century terms. …show more content…

The historian, Heike Paul, also suggests that the myth caught on as it successfully navigated around the North/South divide at a time when the Civil War was still a contentious issue. It is somewhat ironic that the myth proliferated as it did not upset political

Open Document