Wild West Essays

  • In The Real Wild West

    1027 Words  | 3 Pages

    Americans and the world at large have determined that the Wild West has only certain characteristics and constraints. They believe that there is always a cowboy or lawman as the good guy. Bad guys are seen as rough, maybe crazy, and unredeemable. The terrain also gets a reputation for being unforgiving to the unprepared by being filled with danger. However, not all of these conceptions are necessarily true. By going through works over the subject that were written by historians and then comparing

  • Wild West

    1297 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the beginning moving West was the majority of the barriers and obstructions that the setters had to face. Indian attacks, blizzards, tornadoes, flash floods and just being ill prepared among and numerous other hard ships took many settlers lives and were tough to over come. The journey was across a uniform, dusty, wind-swept, treeless nothingness. The temperatures would very a lot between 110 and below freezing. Not to mention that there was no trees for shade or cover from the storms. In this

  • Mythologization Of The Wild West

    618 Words  | 2 Pages

    The West was a great era and all, but it is often mythologized. People think that cowboys were romantic, all white, could make a fortune in the west, and western towns were lawless. To tell you the truth, it’s the very opposite. Cowboys were poor, not everyone was white, there were harsh conditions. There was more than just fighting, whites, and men. The Wild West was from 1865-1895. The West was located near the mississippi river. The wild west is named that because the untamed territories were

  • Wild West Flaws

    525 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Wild West is the word that that has been coined for a period in American history that coincided with the movement of the white settlers west wards. It was a turbulent period and dominated by gunmen, sheriffs or lawmen, red Indians and the settlers themselves. It was the age that opened America to development and perhaps what the USA is today would never have been in case this period had not existed. This entire period was marked by courage, perseverance, adventure, inventiveness and strength

  • The Wild West Essay

    1481 Words  | 3 Pages

    20th century. Immense attention is primarily targeted towards the western part of the United States during the 19th century, a period widely known as the Old West, or the Wild West. I wanted to know more about the Wild West, so I decided to interview a farmer by the name of David Smith. I asked, “David, why did you decide to move to the West?” he replied, “I need better land to grow my produce. The land and soil back in the East has been stripped of its resources and nutrients. My family, along with

  • Was the WIld West Really Wild

    524 Words  | 2 Pages

    If you said the words Wild West to someone, no doubt they would picture a mustached man sitting at a card game in an old saloon surrounded by cowboys and prostitutes. A player opposite him would be hiding an extra card up his sleeve, and soon enough he would be called on it and face off in the city square. Both players would step back and there’d be a long moment before the cheater moved for his hip holster, however he wouldn’t be fast enough. The gamer would draw his revolver and shoot the cheater

  • Women in the Wild West

    1314 Words  | 3 Pages

    Women in the Wild West were resourceful women that dealt with the harsh conditions of their time, the lawlessness, and living with very few amenities. Women of the Wild West was not like many movies and book portray them to be; they were not helpless, weak, or incapable to think for themselves. On the contrary they were women that raised children, establishd churches and schools, warded off Indian attacks, and many also participated in the voting rights for women. Women of the West was main contributors

  • American Exceptionalism In The Wild West

    1251 Words  | 3 Pages

    Another interesting element in relation to the content of the show is that, as Ann Fabian describes, ‘Buffalo Bill’s Wild West’ “presented audiences with imaginative solutions to real problems” (The West 131). Because the show opened before the official closing of the frontier, the audience could relate to or had at least heard of similar problems as those presented by Buffalo Bill. The majority of show’s solutions drew on the rhetoric of ‘American Exceptionalism’ and ‘Manifest Destiny’ and illustrated

  • Great Achievements of Women of the Wild West

    1762 Words  | 4 Pages

    Have you ever wondered where we would be without the women of the Wild West? The most obvious we would be extinct, because there would be no reproduction of offspring. Women were needed for this reason, but there was so many more contributions that they made. Women were important in founding this great land. The women traveled with their men in hopes of getting free land out west, but it was a different story when they arrived. The winters were bad, rain was often lacking, and therefore, the

  • The Wild West Genre

    815 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Wild West 9MGI The Wild West was a period of great change in North America. After 1775, the American Colonies began to expand westward in search of more land. This expansion was led mostly by cattle ranchers in need of new pastures for their herds. Over time, people gradually left their homes and friends on the East coast, and moved into little townships in the west. This would be a very difficult decision for them, since they generally didn’t know whether they would be able

  • The Wild West Analysis

    638 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Wild West begins after the Civil War in 1865 and lasted 30 years. It was called the Wild West because of their lawlessness which allowed wild and unrestrained behavior. The American Wild West was a country with a lot of danger, including cowboys, guns, and horses where Chon Wang had the role of a famous sheriff. This supported that the film is historically realistic because famous outlaws and lawmen of the American wild west. There are real famous sheriffs who took down the outlaws, bandit bank

  • A Summary Of The Wild West

    997 Words  | 2 Pages

    It includes tales from Pocahontas in Europe to the Native Americans touring Europe, showing Indians with Buffalo Bill 's Wild West show in the late nineteenth-century. Dagmar significantly used different sources to justify his vision of the portrayal of natives by the Europeans. The literary fabrications of the Pathak 2 ‘vanishing race’ by Karl Mary ans the reinvention of

  • Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

    3161 Words  | 7 Pages

    movies of the 1960s was Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid , which featured Paul Newman and Robert Redford as the two titled Western outlaws. The film portrays the careers of Butch and Sundance, and how they were forced by the law to leave the Wild West for South America. In the last scene of the movie, the two bandits are shown surrounded by a bunch of South American soldiers after a robbery-gone-bad. Facing capture and extradition to the United States, the two badmen charge out of their hiding

  • Cyberethics - Ethics in the Age of the Internet

    1329 Words  | 3 Pages

    well as just about any dimension of our lives. Most Internet users are convinced of its general utility and positive benefits. However behind it, the Internet, as well as its technological offspring’s the World Wide Web has been compared to the Wild West, because no one owns the network and there is no law and regulations. In consequence of the growth of the Internet, there have been increasing calls for its regulation from many sides. NEW MEDIA The new medium of the Internet has begun to create

  • Aussie (dog)

    1175 Words  | 3 Pages

    Spain to the United States had these dogs shipped to California when the United States imported sheep from Australia in the 19th century (Palika 23). The history of the west during the late 1800s filled with tall tales, and the Australian Shepherd's history during this time period is no exception. Leaving the romance of the Wild West aside, most of the people who moved westward in the 1800s had modest dreams of starting a new life, buying land where they could raise a family (Palika 19). Even though

  • Roughing It By Mark Twain

    995 Words  | 2 Pages

    because Mark Twain's brother had a job as the Secretary of Nevada. This book, journal, started when they were leaving to go to Carson City; and ended when Mark Twain decided to move to New York instead of living in San Francisco or any part of the wild west. In between this time he talked about how they became rich and how they lost it and how they became rich again and lost it. He also talked about their trips to different places and they also talked about Slade and Indians and Mormons, which brings

  • Pride, Honor and Survival in The Last Samurai and Hidalgo

    1234 Words  | 3 Pages

    the cavalry. Knowing that he delivered the order sealing the fate of his people, Hopkins falls into horrible depression, taking to heavy drinking. Because of his reputation as the ‘world’s greatest endurance rider,’ Hopkins joins Buffalo Bills Wild West Show, and is haunted by the nightmare of the massacre. In an example pride, honor and survival, Hopkins is challenged to overcome his depression and self-pity and enter a race, a 3,000 mile survival race across the Arabian Desert, known as the

  • The Rite Of Manhood

    1343 Words  | 3 Pages

    childhood, most people consider running away, most for a few days but, in some cases, forever. Many causes influence a child to run away, including fights, abuse, and unhappiness. In All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy, two boys run away into the Wild West to find a life you can only read about. Though they can never find this perfect place, the journey itself is extraordinary. The reader is taken on a ride that entails danger, love, and, ultimately, self discovery. This ride has rite of passage written

  • All the Pretty Horses

    1459 Words  | 3 Pages

    This is an honest tale. Cormac McCarthy follows John Grady as he embarks on his journey of self-discovery across the border. Armed with a few pesos in his pocket, a strong horse and a friend at his side, John Grady thinks he’s ready to take on the Wild West of Mexico. At their final steps in America, a stranger, aged thirteen, joins our heroes. This unexpected variable named Blevins challenges John Grady, testing his character and pushing him to uncomfortable limits. The dynamic of their relationship

  • Searching For Independence In Dubliners

    1683 Words  | 4 Pages

    boy. The story is written in first-person giving the reader an advantage in knowing the thoughts of the narrator. The narrator and his friend, Mahony, desire independence from their ordinary lives at home. They have read several stories about the Wild West that cause them to think about exploring the world outside of the one they already know. An incident that happens in school triggers the boys to finally make plans to skip school to go explore downtown Dublin. This is the major independent action