The movement of people and settlement of the American west has been psychologically and sociologically represented as engendered by a sense of Manifest Destiny. Yet, the western migration was fueled by capitalist corporations seeking profit by exploiting international markets for goods through extractive practices (principally animal pelts, fish, and lumber): the Hudson\u27s Bay Company, the North West Company, and millionaire American capitalist John Jacob Astor. The economic foundations of settlement have, however, been erased in cinematic representations of this history, replaced first by the Hollywood Western and its myth of frontier individuality, and subsequently by the Hollywood road movie, concerned largely with an existential que...
The sociological study of popular cinema provides an analytic entry point for exploring how economic...
Wagon trains on the Santa Fe Trail. Veins of gold in southern Colorado. Irrigation canals in the Pec...
Harry S. Stout’s American Aristocrats argues that the “vast movement” of settlers west “was the grea...
In “Democracy and Capitalism in the American Western,” I argue that the Western consistently dramati...
The article is about the tenth image by famous Marx Brothers. Author of the text carried out a thoro...
This essay explores the imperialist nature of the American road movie as it is defined by the film’s...
This paper analyzes the archetype of the wanderer as a cultural phenomenon in 1960s America starting...
Article discusses the implications of Manifest Destiny and the Whipple Expedition, particularly the ...
‘Hitting the road’ has always been a significant act in the American culture, since it represents th...
This thesis is a rhetorical analysis of the movie Easy Rider. It explores how auteurs Peter Fonda, D...
Three great Western films—Stagecoach, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, and the contemporary No Coun...
American Mobilities investigates representations of mobility – social, economic, geographic – in Ame...
The means of the extravagant rentier diminish daily in inverse proportion to the growing possibiliti...
The accepted manuscript (AM) is the final draft author manuscript, as accepted for publication by a ...
Even before the founding of the Republic, Americans desired to expand Westward taking with them thei...
The sociological study of popular cinema provides an analytic entry point for exploring how economic...
Wagon trains on the Santa Fe Trail. Veins of gold in southern Colorado. Irrigation canals in the Pec...
Harry S. Stout’s American Aristocrats argues that the “vast movement” of settlers west “was the grea...
In “Democracy and Capitalism in the American Western,” I argue that the Western consistently dramati...
The article is about the tenth image by famous Marx Brothers. Author of the text carried out a thoro...
This essay explores the imperialist nature of the American road movie as it is defined by the film’s...
This paper analyzes the archetype of the wanderer as a cultural phenomenon in 1960s America starting...
Article discusses the implications of Manifest Destiny and the Whipple Expedition, particularly the ...
‘Hitting the road’ has always been a significant act in the American culture, since it represents th...
This thesis is a rhetorical analysis of the movie Easy Rider. It explores how auteurs Peter Fonda, D...
Three great Western films—Stagecoach, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, and the contemporary No Coun...
American Mobilities investigates representations of mobility – social, economic, geographic – in Ame...
The means of the extravagant rentier diminish daily in inverse proportion to the growing possibiliti...
The accepted manuscript (AM) is the final draft author manuscript, as accepted for publication by a ...
Even before the founding of the Republic, Americans desired to expand Westward taking with them thei...
The sociological study of popular cinema provides an analytic entry point for exploring how economic...
Wagon trains on the Santa Fe Trail. Veins of gold in southern Colorado. Irrigation canals in the Pec...
Harry S. Stout’s American Aristocrats argues that the “vast movement” of settlers west “was the grea...