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Owen Wister And The West (Volume 30) (The Oklahoma Western Biographies),Used
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Westerns are rarely only about the West. From the works of James Fenimore Cooper to Gary Cooper, stories set in the American West have served as vehicles for topical commentary. More than any other pioneer of the genre, Owen Wister turned the Western into a form of social and political critique, touching on such issues as race, the environment, womens rights, and immigration. In Owen Wister and the West, a biographicalliterary account of Wisters life and writings, Gary Scharnhorst shows how the West shaped Wisters career and ideas, even as he lived and worked in the East.The Virginian, Wisters claim to literary fame, was published in 1902, but his writing career actually began in 1891 and continued for twentyfive years after the publication of his masterpiece. Scharnhorst traces Wisters western connections up to and through the publication of The Virginian and shows that the author remained deeply connected to the American West until his death in 1938. Like his Harvard friend Theodore Roosevelt, Wister was the sickly scion of an eastern family who recuperated in the West before returning to his home and inherited social position. His life story is punctuated with appearances by such contemporaries as Frederic Remington, Rudyard Kipling, and Ernest Hemingway.Scharnhorst thoroughly discusses Wisters experiences in the West, including a detailed chronology of his travels and the writings that grew out of them. He offers numerous insights into Wisters adroit use of sources, and provides revealing comparisons between Wisters western works and the writings of other authors treating the same region.The West, Scharnhorst shows, was the crucible in which Wister tested and expressed his political opinions, most of them startlingly conservative by present standards. Yet The Virginian remains the template for the western novel today. More than any other Western writer of the past century and a half, Wister's career merits resurrection.
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