

An edition of Kill the Cowboy (1993)
a battle of mythology in the new West
By Sharman Apt Russell
Publish Date
1993
Publisher
Addison-Wesley
Language
eng
Pages
217
Description:
The myth of the cowboy resonates with us all - it represents physical freedom and spiritual solitude, individualism, and a closeness to nature in all its rugged, soaring magnificence. But the cowboy's intimacy with animals rests on his domination of them. His cattle are protected so that they can be killed. Wild animals - coyotes, bears, eagles - are competition and must be destroyed. Land is being overgrazed and in some places permanently damaged. "Some would say that we need to kill the myth of the cowboy," Russell writes. "We need new images and new role models - heroines as well as heroes, Indians as well as cavalry, ecologists as well as individualists." In Kill the Cowboy she offers a new perspective on this cultural icon, urging all of us, cowboys included, to find "that inner part of us which resonates with nature and corresponds to what is wild."
subjects: Attitudes, Ranchers, Nature, Environmentalists, Cowboys, Effect of human beings on, Range policy, Range management, Prairie ecology, Soil degradation, West (u.s.), social life and customs, United states, environmental conditions, Nature, effect of human beings on, Nature conservation
Places: West (U.S.)