Frontier Essays

  • The Western Frontier

    1588 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Western Frontier As I sat thinking about what to write about the western frontier I started to realize that issues were the things that at least keep me going and I knew I could say a lot on both. I couldn't quite figure out how I was going to put them together until I did some research and other reading and started to remember their life and its purposes. I'm not the one to into history but I came across some very interesting information which I felt could bring my points of view out quite

  • Frontier Turner Analysis

    2165 Words  | 5 Pages

    that the frontier is disappearing. The 1890 Census explicitly states that “Up to and including 1880 the country had a frontier of settlement, but at present the unsettled area has been so broken into by isolated bodies of settlement that there can hardly be said to be a frontier line….[the frontier’s extent] can not therefore have a place in the census reports”. Turner’s essay is sparked by this statement because he does not want the frontier to disappear, since he believes that the frontier has given

  • Frontiers of an Arab Woman

    4688 Words  | 10 Pages

    Frontiers of an Arab Woman “When you spend a whole day among the trees, waking up with walls as horizons becomes unbearable (Mernissi, 59).” One would assume that in the face of woman’s liberation-access to an equal and higher education, choice of a husband and access to a prosperous/independent future-that a woman would be positioned to escape gender oppression. However, this is not the case for the Arab women of Fatima Mernissi’s Dreams of Trespass and Ahdaf Soueif’s In the Eye of the

  • Western Frontier

    1054 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Western Frontier The western frontier is full of many experiences that changed the frontier. Each significant event has an important role on the shaping of society and way it influenced a new nation. Each author brought a new perspective and thought process to the western experience which either contradicted Turner or supported his theories. The frontier ideas that interested me include topics such as trading frontier, farming frontier, nationality and government, and the neglecting of women

  • Jackson Turner Western Frontier

    641 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Frederick Jackson Turner’s essay “The Significance of the Frontier in American History”, he argues that the existence of the Western frontier of the U.S. played a major role in shaping American culture. Turner reasons that the frontier, the border between civilized society and the wilderness, was a tempting place for pioneers to settle since its unexplored land held opportunities for self-determination. The pioneers tamed the frontier in their efforts to make the land more amenable to them and

  • Conquering the Texas Frontier

    736 Words  | 2 Pages

    Conquering the Texas Frontier When looking at the vast lands of Texas after the Civil War, many different people came to the lands in search for new opportunities and new wealth. Many were lured by the large area that Texas occupied for they wanted to become ranchers and cattle herders, of which there was great need for due to the large population of cows and horses. In this essay there are three different people with three different goals in the adventures on the frontier lands of Texas in its earliest

  • Dreams of Trespass: Defining the Frontier

    3708 Words  | 8 Pages

    Dreams of Trespass: Defining the Frontier In Fatima Mernissi’s widely acclaimed book Dreams of Trespass, the storyline weaves around the tale of a young girls’ life in a traditional Moroccan harem that is as much enchanting as it is disparaging. As we follow the young girl from day to day and experience all the little trivialities of her life, we notice that she is quite a precocious little child. She is constantly questioning, in fact, her mother and aunts constantly tell her that she should

  • Exploring Frontiers of Thought in Walden

    1144 Words  | 3 Pages

    Exploring Frontiers of Thought in Walden In his world-famous thought-provoking novel, Walden, Henry David Thoreau presents his readers with a simple, inspirational guide for living.  Written beside the beautiful Walden pond and completely surrounded by an unencumbered  natural world, Thoreau writes about his own relationship with the beauty that surrounds him.  His book provides an outlet for everyone to learn from his lessons learned in nature, whether they be city-dwellers or his own

  • My Antonia Essay: Women on the Frontier

    867 Words  | 2 Pages

    Women on the Frontier in My Ántonia In 1891, marking the elimination of "free land," the Census Bureau announced that the frontier no longer existed (Takaki, A Different Mirror, 225).  The end of the frontier meant the constant impoverishment, instead of the wealth they had dreamed of, for a large number of immigrants from the Old World: they came too late.  My Ántonia, however, illuminates another frontier, a frontier within America that most immigrants had to face.  It was the frontier between "Americans"

  • Power of the Frontier Exposed in My Antonia

    1932 Words  | 4 Pages

    Power of the Frontier Exposed in My Antonia Willa Cather's novel My Ántonia dramatizes the effect the frontier has on both native-born people and immigrants that come to the West in search of new beginnings. The story centers around two families living in a remote area of Nebraska from completely diverse backgrounds. This tale suggests that regardless of where a person comes from, the trials and tribulations of living under such tough conditions will ultimately impact his/her future existence

  • Frontier Expansion vs. the American Bison

    881 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frontier Expansion vs. the American Bison “The wilderness masters the colonist. It finds him a European in dress, industries, tools, modes of travel, and thought. It takes him from the railroad car and puts him in the birch canoe. It strips off the garments of civilization and arrays him in the hunting shirt and the moccasin. It puts him in the log cabin.... Before long he has gone to planting Indian corn and plowing with a sharp stick.... In short, at the frontier the environment is at first

  • Myth Of The American Frontier

    1054 Words  | 3 Pages

    of the American frontier. Its symbolic meaning created such moral, ethical, and emotional values in American that it paved the way for a country that would grow from an East Coast settlement, to a coast-to-coast nation of progress. One of the most famous stories in frontier mythology is that of Paul Bunyan. Although Bunyan’s stories didn’t appear on paper until the early twentieth century, his stories were passed down by word of mouth telling the tale of the “Last of the Frontier Demigods.” “Paul

  • Sacajawea - Explorer Of The Frontier

    1687 Words  | 4 Pages

    Sacagawea – Explorer of the American Frontier In order to understand how important Sacagawea was to the Lewis and Clark's mission to the Pacific, her history and the history of her people must be told. An explorer known as Captain Clarke wrote that in order to pronounce the Indian words correctly, every letter sound must be made. There has been much debate on the spelling of the young explorer's name, since the letters to not match the sound (ex. "Sacajawea" does not match "Sah-cah' gah-we-ah)

  • Lethal Tools of Our Past-Weapons of The Frontier

    838 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lethal Tools of Our Past- Weapons of The Frontier A starving man paves his own highway with the calloused soles of his hunger. Out on the untamed wastelands, forests, and prairies it was the way of the gun, the knife, and the axe for all that managed to survive. And survive these brave men and women did with a sheer will of endurance that the pampered of today’s world has not come to know even the shadow of. In our modern comfort we live in what legacy these bold souls carved out of this nation

  • Turner's Frontier Thesis

    1089 Words  | 3 Pages

    Turner’s frontier offered an unshakeable ethnocentric and nationalistic view of western history. This is where New Social historians saw an opportunity to fashion a new, more diverse, more conclusive version of westward expansion. Turner’s key ideas of “The American West” and the “frontier” were transformed by a new generation of historians looking to challenge the status quo. One of the most technical problems concerning Turner’s methods was the fact that in studying the frontier, one is

  • Negotiating Identity: The Frontier in Moby-Dick, by Herman Melville

    2873 Words  | 6 Pages

    both the rapidly changing geographical frontiers of America, and the accompanying shift of social, political, religious and cultural boundaries. The Pequod's world is governed by laws other than those of the American mainland. Figuratively situated at the frontier of the New World, the ship evokes the mythic American pioneer with the independent spirit, aggression and courage to wrench a nation from the wilderness. Melville lays out a version of the frontier myth that sees redefinition of national

  • Frontier Airlines Marketing

    652 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frontier airlines marketing utilizes the 4Ps within the constraints that were listed in the module slides. The product, for all intents and purposes, is the seat, in motion from one place to another. If that seat goes unfilled, it is not stored for later use, but goes bad, like fruit. This is a similar issue of production that hotels face. The unit is constantly produced and expiring, with no option not to produce it if it will not be sold (with the exception of scaling back service on, or closing

  • Frontier Airlines Rebranding Campaign

    1268 Words  | 3 Pages

    Frontier Airlines Rebranding Campaign After baseline studies indicated that Frontier Airlines was unrecognizable in its own core business area, they decided a new image was in order. Frontier released their new ad campaign “A Whole New Animal,” that built on their solid old brand, but conveyed their new goal – that they are affordable, flexible, accommodating, and comfortable. Frontier Airlines launched their new rebranding campaign calling itself "a whole different animal." The campaign uses

  • The Frontier of Existence in Beckett’s Waiting for Godot and Ionesco’s Rhinoceros

    2044 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Frontier of Existence in Beckett’s Waiting for Godot and Ionesco’s Rhinoceros ‘I feel that I had been at the frontier of existence, close to the place where they lose their names, their definition, the place where time stops, almost outside History’ (E Ionesco). This essay will explore the frontier of existence in Beckett’s Waiting for Godot and Ionesco’s Rhinoceros The title Rhinoceros is formed from the ancient Greek Rhino meaning nose and Keros meaning horn. However, in this play

  • Summary Of Jackson's Frontier And Turner

    848 Words  | 2 Pages

    The author’s main theme of the chapter “Jackson’s Frontier—and Turner’s” seems to be theories on the creation and expansion of American development. The main person discussed in this chapter is Fredrick Jackson Turner, a historian from the University of Wisconsin. Turner presented a thesis titled “The Significance of the Frontier in American History” at the World’s Columbian Exposition and in the Johns Hopkins University seminar room in 1893. The central focus of his thesis was that “the existence