The West: An Illustrated History

The West: An Illustrated History

The West: An Illustrated History

The West: An Illustrated History

Paperback(1st Back Bay Edition)

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Overview

Shorn of the 400-plus images that illustrated the TV tie-in edition, the text of The West is an outstanding work of scholarly synthesis and a feat of storytelling. It is a book that will enthrall readers of popular history as well as students of the North American West. Essays by seven noted writers and historians, complement Geoffrey Wards compelling narrative.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780316924856
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Publication date: 09/17/1999
Edition description: 1st Back Bay Edition
Pages: 448
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

Read an Excerpt

The West

An Illustrated History
By Geoffrey C. Ward

Back Bay Books

Copyright © 2003 Geoffrey C. Ward
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0316735892


Preface

In a conversation with us several years ago, the Kiowa poet N. Scott Momaday remarked that the American West is "a dream. It is what people who have come here from the beginning of time have dreamed.... It is a landscape that has to be seen to be believed, and may have to be believed in order to be seen."

For five years we have traveled that landscape, photographed its vistas, talked to its people, sought out its history, all as part of our production of The West, an eight-part documentary series for public television. Now "100,000 airmiles, 72 filmed interviews, 74 visits to archives and collections, and more than 250 hours of film later "we have begun to understand at least something of what Momaday meant. In the West, everything seems somehow larger than life, and we now can see why so many different peoples have come to consider their own innermost lives inextricably linked with it. Over the centuries, the West has been the repository of the dreams of an astonishing variety of people "and it has been on the long, dusty roads of the West that those dreams have crisscrossed and collided, transforming all who traveled along them, rewarding some while disappointing others.

The story of the West was once told as an unbroken series of triumphs "the victory of "civilization" over "barbarism," a relentlessly inspirational epic in which greed and cruelty were often glossed over as enterprise and courage. Later, that epic would be turned upside down by some, so that the story of the West became another "equally misleading "morality tale, one in which the crimes of conquest and dispossession were allowed to overshadow everything else that ever happened beyond the Mississippi. The truth about the West is far more complicated, and much more compelling.

America without the West is unthinkable now. Yet there was nothing inevitable about our taking of it. Others had prior claim to its vastness, after all, and we could quite easily have remained forever huddled east of the Mississippi. In resolving to move west and become a continental nation we would exact a fearful price from those already living on the land. But we also became a different people, and it is no accident that that turbulent history "and the myths that have grown up around it "has made the West the most potent symbol of the nation as a whole, overseas as well as in our own hearts.

Of course, no film series, no book "no library of books, for that matter "can ever encompass the whole story of the West. There are as many valid approaches to telling it as there are able historians willing to try. We believe that history really is biography, and in this volume " and in the script for the twelve-hour film series upon which it is based " we have chosen to focus on the experiences of individual men and women, many of whom tell their own stories in their own words, through diaries and letters and autobiographical accounts.

Our cast is deliberately diverse "there are explorers and soldiers and Indian warriors, settlers and railroad builders and gaudy showmen, but there are also a Chinese ditch digger and a rich Mexican American landowner, a forty-niner from Chile and a Texas cowboy born in Britain, a woman missionary to the Indians who loathed the West and a Wellesley graduate who loved it in spite of everything it did to her and her family. Some of our subjects are celebrated figures. Others will be new to most readers. None plays the stereotyped part one or another of the West"s contradictory myths dictates. All were selected because they seemed to us both to illuminate the times through which they lived and to tell us something important about the West, as well. Our subjects were chosen, too, to demonstrate that in the often stirring story of the West, a human price was paid for every gain. The stories we"ve tried to tell in these pages and on the television screen at least suggest, we hope, the outlines of a more inclusive story of the West than is conventionally told; a story that is more frank about our failures and more clear-eyed about the cost of even our greatest successes than the old one, but also a story in which each of us can find a place and all can take pardonable pride. The story of the American West, we believe, is at once the story of a unique part of the country and a metaphor for the country as a whole. With all its heroism and inequity, exploitation and adventure, sober realities and bright myths, it is the story of all of us, no matter where on the continent we happen to live, no matter how recently our ancestors arrived on its shores.



Continues...


Excerpted from The West by Geoffrey C. Ward Copyright © 2003 by Geoffrey C. Ward.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Prefacexvii
Chapter 1The Northern Mystery: Other Wests1
Chapter 2The Most Avid Nation: The Mission at Waiilatpu: A Meeting Place for Western Women54
Chapter 3Seeing the Elephant Myth and Myopia: Hispanic Peoples and Western History118
Chapter 4A Hell of a Storm Believing in the American West172
Chapter 5The Grandest Enterprise Under God Great Migrations: The Pioneer in the American West214
Chapter 6Rivers Run Backward Wilderness and the West290
Chapter 7The Great Die-Up The American West and The Burden of Belief330
Chapter 8The Outcome of Our Earnest Endeavors Monument Valley384
Acknowledgments
Selected Bibliography
Index
Illustration Credits
Film Credits434
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