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Imagining Wild Bill James Butler Hickok In War Media And Memory 1st Edition Paul Ashdown Edward Caudill

  • SKU: BELL-51692296
Imagining Wild Bill James Butler Hickok In War Media And Memory 1st Edition Paul Ashdown Edward Caudill
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Imagining Wild Bill James Butler Hickok In War Media And Memory 1st Edition Paul Ashdown Edward Caudill instant download after payment.

Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 5.86 MB
Pages: 274
Author: Paul Ashdown; Edward Caudill
ISBN: 9780809337897, 0809337894
Language: English
Year: 2020
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Imagining Wild Bill James Butler Hickok In War Media And Memory 1st Edition Paul Ashdown Edward Caudill by Paul Ashdown; Edward Caudill 9780809337897, 0809337894 instant download after payment.

Wild Bill's ever-evolving legend When it came to the Wild West, the nineteenth-century press rarely let truth get in the way of a good story. James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok's story was no exception. Mythologized and sensationalized, Hickok was turned into the deadliest gunfighter of all, a so-called moral killer, a national phenomenon even while he was alive. Rather than attempt to tease truth from fiction, coauthors Paul Ashdown and Edward Caudill investigate the ways in which Hickok embodied the culture of glamorized violence Americans embraced after the Civil War and examine the process of how his story emerged, evolved, and turned into a viral multimedia sensation full of the excitement, danger, and romance of the West. Journalists, the coauthors demonstrate, invented "Wild Bill" Hickok, glorifying him as a civilizer. They inflated his body count and constructed his legend in the midst of an emerging celebrity culture that grew up around penny newspapers. His death by treachery, at a relatively young age, made the story tragic, and dime-store novelists took over where the press left off. Reimagined as entertainment, Hickok's legend continued to enthrall Americans in literature, on radio, on television, and in the movies, and it still draws tourists to notorious Deadwood, South Dakota. American culture often embraces myths that later become accepted as popular history. By investigating the allure and power of Hickok's myth, Ashdown and Caudill explain how American journalism and popular culture have shaped the way Civil War-era figures are remembered and reveal how Americans have embraced violence as entertainment.

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