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Horse opera : the strange history of the 1930s singing cowboy / Peter Stanfield.
Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.W4 S83 2002
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Stanfield, Peter, 1958-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Western films--United States--History and criticism.
- Western films.
- United States.
- Motion picture actors and actresses--United States--Biography.
- Motion picture actors and actresses.
- Country musicians--United States--Biography.
- Country musicians.
- Genre:
- Biographies.
- Physical Description:
- x, 177 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [2002]
- Summary:
- In this innovative take on a neglected chapter of film history, Peter Stanfield challenges the commonly held view of the singing cowboy as an ephemeral figure of fun and argues instead that he was one of the most important cultural figures to emerge out of the Great Depression. The rural or newly urban working-class families who flocked to see the latest exploits of Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Tex Ritter, and other singing cowboys were an audience largely ignored by mainstream Hollywood film. Hard hit by the depression, faced with the threat -- and often the reality -- of dispossession and dislocation, pressured to adapt to new ways of living, these small-town filmgoers saw their ambitions, fantasies, and desires embodied in the singing cowboy and their social and political circumstances dramatized in "B" Westerns. Stanfield traces the singing cowboy's previously uncharted roots in the performance tradition of blackface minstrelsy and its literary antecedents in dime novels, magazine fiction, and the novels of B. M. Bower, showing how silent cinema conventions, the developing commercial music media, and the prevailing conditions of film production shaped the "horse opera" of the 1930s. Entertaining and thought-provoking, Horse Opera recovers not only the forgotten cowboys of the 1930s but also their forgotten audiences: the ordinary men and women whose lives were brightened by the sights and songs of the singing Western.
- Contents:
- Introduction : keep them clean
- By the costume we may tell the man : turn-of-the-century fiction and the figure of the cowboy
- Liberty's cuckoos : cowboys of the silent screen
- Monodies for the cowpuncher : cowboy songs and singers
- Cowboy republic : producing the singing western
- Cowboy minstrels : series westerns and musical performance
- New Deal cowboys : the mystery of the hooded riders.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 157-171) and index.
- ISBN:
- 0252027337
- 0252070496
- OCLC:
- 47791153
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