The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks

The myth of the Frontier, which locates the birth of the American nation in its confrontation with a bordering savagery, was a national myth in Western films until the 1960s. As a genre engaged with the exploration of Americanness, the Western attracted many ex-Confederates in search of political le...

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Main Author: Hervé Mayer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2018-07-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9409
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author Hervé Mayer
author_facet Hervé Mayer
author_sort Hervé Mayer
collection DOAJ
description The myth of the Frontier, which locates the birth of the American nation in its confrontation with a bordering savagery, was a national myth in Western films until the 1960s. As a genre engaged with the exploration of Americanness, the Western attracted many ex-Confederates in search of political legitimacy and the Western Frontier became a place of national rehabilitation for the South. When the narrative of the myth inverted in favor of the Indian in the late 1960s, freedmen replaced Confederate heroes in their quest to integrate the national community on screen. The Frontier as America’s birthplace gave the South a second chance and revealed its cultural potential for the nation. But the Frontier, in its confrontational version of the savage wars, also resonates with the myth of the Lost Cause, in which barbarous freedmen threaten white society. If The Birth of a Nation was the first and last film in which Blacks were pictured as predatory beasts in Hollywood, this internal frontier reappears with the cultural crisis of the 1960s, when the South became home to savages of a new kind, degenerate rednecks, who embody the failure of the national myth in the Western, serving as scapegoats for an American savagery revealed by the My Lai massacre and the Manson murders. The South in film thus wavers between two frontiers: the Frontier of American regeneration in the Western and the frontier as a threat to America in the Southern.
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spelling doaj-art-c126732dd4994fe68a52e84ba1fb2ca72025-01-06T09:03:25ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532018-07-011610.4000/lisa.9409The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage RednecksHervé MayerThe myth of the Frontier, which locates the birth of the American nation in its confrontation with a bordering savagery, was a national myth in Western films until the 1960s. As a genre engaged with the exploration of Americanness, the Western attracted many ex-Confederates in search of political legitimacy and the Western Frontier became a place of national rehabilitation for the South. When the narrative of the myth inverted in favor of the Indian in the late 1960s, freedmen replaced Confederate heroes in their quest to integrate the national community on screen. The Frontier as America’s birthplace gave the South a second chance and revealed its cultural potential for the nation. But the Frontier, in its confrontational version of the savage wars, also resonates with the myth of the Lost Cause, in which barbarous freedmen threaten white society. If The Birth of a Nation was the first and last film in which Blacks were pictured as predatory beasts in Hollywood, this internal frontier reappears with the cultural crisis of the 1960s, when the South became home to savages of a new kind, degenerate rednecks, who embody the failure of the national myth in the Western, serving as scapegoats for an American savagery revealed by the My Lai massacre and the Manson murders. The South in film thus wavers between two frontiers: the Frontier of American regeneration in the Western and the frontier as a threat to America in the Southern.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9409violenceAmerican cinemaFrontierWesternSouthcultural studies
spellingShingle Hervé Mayer
The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks
Revue LISA
violence
American cinema
Frontier
Western
South
cultural studies
title The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks
title_full The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks
title_fullStr The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks
title_full_unstemmed The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks
title_short The South between Two Frontiers: Confederate Cowboys and Savage Rednecks
title_sort south between two frontiers confederate cowboys and savage rednecks
topic violence
American cinema
Frontier
Western
South
cultural studies
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9409
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