The latest historian to chronicle the phenomenon, Paul Reddin postulates a wild west show continuum from the artist George Catlin to Buffalo Bill, and then from the Miller Brothers\u27 101 Wild West Show to the early silent cowboy films of Tom Mix. With clear, precise writing, impeccable research in several languages, and voluminous endnotes, Reddin has produced a Wild West tour de force that sets a standard for interpretive history of the public presentation of the frontier, Native Americans, and the Great Plains to enthusiastic American and European audiences. Wild West Shows is the work of a mature, contemplative historian who defines the spectacles as a form of entertainment, a vehicle for understanding the parent culture, and a cataly...
Review of: Buffalo Bill from Prairie to Palace, written by John M. Burke, edited by Chris Dixon, ...
The Western, yet again, lies dormant. The revival that began in the late eighties with the greatest ...
Growing out of work for a major exhibition at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, where Morgan Bail...
The latest historian to chronicle the phenomenon, Paul Reddin postulates a wild west show continuum ...
Novels and histories of the American West have always attracted a large, varied audience. Some reade...
In many ways this is a most useful catalogue. It features six essays by distinguished scholars all i...
Review of: Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West. Bridger, Bobby
For the last quarter of the 19th century, in places such as New York, Chicago, California, London, G...
A chapter or two into this extraordinarily well-documented and illustrated work on one of the more b...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
BUFFALO BILL, SUPERSTAR William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody was the best known man of the Gilded Age, and...
Of all the popular culture heroes of the American West, Buffalo Bill stands out as the quintessentia...
Joy Kasson\u27s study of William Cody as the first modern celebrity, a man who took advantage of eve...
In Telling Western Stories Richard Etulain has produced one of those rare combinations of a book tha...
Delivered at the World\u27s Columbian Exposition in 1893, Frederick Jackson Turner\u27s now-famous f...
Review of: Buffalo Bill from Prairie to Palace, written by John M. Burke, edited by Chris Dixon, ...
The Western, yet again, lies dormant. The revival that began in the late eighties with the greatest ...
Growing out of work for a major exhibition at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, where Morgan Bail...
The latest historian to chronicle the phenomenon, Paul Reddin postulates a wild west show continuum ...
Novels and histories of the American West have always attracted a large, varied audience. Some reade...
In many ways this is a most useful catalogue. It features six essays by distinguished scholars all i...
Review of: Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West. Bridger, Bobby
For the last quarter of the 19th century, in places such as New York, Chicago, California, London, G...
A chapter or two into this extraordinarily well-documented and illustrated work on one of the more b...
Review of: Wild West Shows and the Images of American Indians, 1883-1933. Moses, L. G
BUFFALO BILL, SUPERSTAR William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody was the best known man of the Gilded Age, and...
Of all the popular culture heroes of the American West, Buffalo Bill stands out as the quintessentia...
Joy Kasson\u27s study of William Cody as the first modern celebrity, a man who took advantage of eve...
In Telling Western Stories Richard Etulain has produced one of those rare combinations of a book tha...
Delivered at the World\u27s Columbian Exposition in 1893, Frederick Jackson Turner\u27s now-famous f...
Review of: Buffalo Bill from Prairie to Palace, written by John M. Burke, edited by Chris Dixon, ...
The Western, yet again, lies dormant. The revival that began in the late eighties with the greatest ...
Growing out of work for a major exhibition at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, where Morgan Bail...