KXCI 91.3FM Community Radio – Summer Sensation 2015
Auction Ends: Jun 17, 2015 10:00 PM EDT

Books

The Sagebrush Trail: Western Movies and Twentieth- Century America by Richard Aquila

Item Number
144
Estimated Value
35 USD
Sold
23 USD to Donnad
Number of Bids
5  -  Bid History

Item Description

 
Cover
The Sagebrush Trail
Western Movies and Twentieth-Century America
By Richard Aquila
360 pp. / 6.00 x 9.00 / 2015
Cloth (978-0-8165-0105-2) [s]
Paper (978-0-8165-3154-7) [s]

  

  Series
  - The Modern American West

Related Interest
  - Western History


The Sagebrush Trail is a history of Western movies but also a history of twentieth-century America. Richard Aquila's fast-paced narrative covers both the silent and sound eras, and includes classic westerns such as Stagecoach, A Fistful of Dollars, and Unforgiven, as well as B-Westerns that starred film cowboys like Tom Mix, Gene Autry, and Hopalong Cassidy.

The book is divided into three parts. Part 1 traces the birth and growth of Westerns from 1900 through the end of World War II. Part 2 focuses on a transitional period in Western movie history during the two decades following World War II. Finally, part 3 shows how Western movies reflected the rapid political, social, and cultural changes that transformed America in the 1960s and the last decades of the twentieth century.

The Sagebrush Trail explains how Westerns evolved throughout the twentieth century in response to changing times, and it provides new evidence and fresh interpretations about both Westerns and American history. These films offer perspectives on the past that historians might otherwise miss. They reveal how Americans reacted to political and social movements, war, and cultural change. The result is the definitive story of Western movies, which contributes to our understanding of not just movie history but also the mythic West and American history. Because of its subject matter and unique approach that blends movies and history, The Sagebrush Trail should appeal to anyone interested in Western movies, pop culture, the American West, and recent American history and culture.

The mythic West beckons but eludes. Yet glimpses of its utopian potential can always be found, even if just for a few hours in the realm of Western movies. There on the silver screen, the mythic West continues to ride tall in the saddle along a "sagebrush trail" that reveals valuable clues about American life and thought. 

The Sagebrush Trail is a panoramic survey of Western movies in the twentieth century, from Edwin Porter's The Great Train Robbery to Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven and beyond. It is also a vivid history of the culture that created and consumed this all-purpose, ever-malleable art form whose themes and characters strike to the heart of the American experience.

—Michael Steiner, author of Regionalists on the Left

The Sagebrush Trail may be the most comprehensive overview of the Western film genre to date. It does an especially impressive job of analyzing movies—literally scores of movies—against the backdrop of changing currents in American culture.

—David M. Wrobel, author of Global West, American Frontier: Travel, Empire, and Exceptionalism from Manifest Destiny to the Great Depression

 

The University of Arizona Press, founded in 1959 as a department of the University of Arizona, is a nonprofit publisher of scholarly and regional books. As a delegate of the University of Arizona to the larger world, the Press publishes the work of scholars wherever they may be, concentrating upon scholarship that reflects the special strengths of the University of Arizona, Arizona State University, and Northern Arizona University.

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