The Oxford History Of The American West

Abstract When we think of the American West, we tend to conjure up images that are known the world over: bearded forty-niners leading pack mules up a mountain trail, the Oklahoma land stampede, Custer’s Last Stand, and especially the range-riding, quick-shooting cowboy. But these familiar images are...

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Other Authors: Milner, Clyde A, O’connor, Carol A, Sandweiss, Martha A
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: Oxford University PressNew York, NY 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195112122.001.0001
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spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/oso/9780195112122.001.0001 2024-05-19T07:40:40+00:00 The Oxford History Of The American West Milner, Clyde A O’connor, Carol A Sandweiss, Martha A 1996 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195112122.001.0001 unknown Oxford University PressNew York, NY ISBN 9780195112122 9780197715192 edited-book 1996 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195112122.001.0001 2024-05-02T09:30:38Z Abstract When we think of the American West, we tend to conjure up images that are known the world over: bearded forty-niners leading pack mules up a mountain trail, the Oklahoma land stampede, Custer’s Last Stand, and especially the range-riding, quick-shooting cowboy. But these familiar images are only a small part of western history. From the arrival of the Navajos in the Southwest more than seven hundred years ago, to the first Spanish settlements in New Mexico in the late sixteenth century, to the large Mormon migration to the Great Salt Lake, to the tourists flocking to the neon landscape of modern Las Vegas, the complex story of the West stretches across centuries, embracing many voices and contrasting cultures. The West is in fact as varied as America itself. Indeed, to enlarge on Wallace Stegner’s singular phrase, the West is America, only more so. Lavishly illustrated and based on the finest scholarship, The Oxford History of the American West is the first comprehensive study to do full justice to the rich complexity of this region. It brings together the work of twenty-eight leading western historians who explore this area from a dazzling number of perspectives. They provide insightful portraits of the West as a distinctive place of varied peoples - native and non-native, European and Asian, African and Latino - and of varied terrain - from the timbered Pacific Northwest to the Dakota Badlands, and from the fires of Kilauea to the ice cliffs of Glacier Bay, Alaska. They describe the great wealth generated by a series of spectacular bonanzas, such as gold at Sutter’s Mill, copper in Butte, Montana, and oil on Alaska’s north shore; illuminate the role of the West in the national and global economy; and consider the environmental challenges created by replacing buffalo with cattle or by designating national parks and military test sites. The book also examines the social forces behind the violence of the West, the great political movements that affected the region (most notably, the Populist Party), and ... Book glacier Alaska Oxford University Press
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collection Oxford University Press
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description Abstract When we think of the American West, we tend to conjure up images that are known the world over: bearded forty-niners leading pack mules up a mountain trail, the Oklahoma land stampede, Custer’s Last Stand, and especially the range-riding, quick-shooting cowboy. But these familiar images are only a small part of western history. From the arrival of the Navajos in the Southwest more than seven hundred years ago, to the first Spanish settlements in New Mexico in the late sixteenth century, to the large Mormon migration to the Great Salt Lake, to the tourists flocking to the neon landscape of modern Las Vegas, the complex story of the West stretches across centuries, embracing many voices and contrasting cultures. The West is in fact as varied as America itself. Indeed, to enlarge on Wallace Stegner’s singular phrase, the West is America, only more so. Lavishly illustrated and based on the finest scholarship, The Oxford History of the American West is the first comprehensive study to do full justice to the rich complexity of this region. It brings together the work of twenty-eight leading western historians who explore this area from a dazzling number of perspectives. They provide insightful portraits of the West as a distinctive place of varied peoples - native and non-native, European and Asian, African and Latino - and of varied terrain - from the timbered Pacific Northwest to the Dakota Badlands, and from the fires of Kilauea to the ice cliffs of Glacier Bay, Alaska. They describe the great wealth generated by a series of spectacular bonanzas, such as gold at Sutter’s Mill, copper in Butte, Montana, and oil on Alaska’s north shore; illuminate the role of the West in the national and global economy; and consider the environmental challenges created by replacing buffalo with cattle or by designating national parks and military test sites. The book also examines the social forces behind the violence of the West, the great political movements that affected the region (most notably, the Populist Party), and ...
author2 Milner, Clyde A
O’connor, Carol A
Sandweiss, Martha A
format Book
title The Oxford History Of The American West
spellingShingle The Oxford History Of The American West
title_short The Oxford History Of The American West
title_full The Oxford History Of The American West
title_fullStr The Oxford History Of The American West
title_full_unstemmed The Oxford History Of The American West
title_sort oxford history of the american west
publisher Oxford University PressNew York, NY
publishDate 1996
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195112122.001.0001
genre glacier
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
Alaska
op_source ISBN 9780195112122 9780197715192
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195112122.001.0001
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