Thursday, September 26, 2013

Pop Culture's Cowboy vs. The Real Cowboy

Pop Culture's Cowboy vs. The Real Cowboy
When we think of cowboys nowadays we often associate them with qualities of great strength and bravery, Indiana Jones-like adventure, attractiveness, and carefree enjoyment. Movies depicting cowboys trace as far back as Thomas Edison’s film The Great Train Robbery in which brave and extremely overly exaggerated strong cowboys rob a train. Good or bad, cowboys are perceived with great skill and strength an attractive set of characteristics for both modern and historic Americans. However in actuality cowboys in the West were quite the opposite of the common popular culture’s heroic perception of these low paid workers.  One of the biggest misconceptions is that cowboys often fought Indians. In truth the most common people to have fought Indians would have been white miners, settlers, and soldiers. Not cowboys. A cowboy’s job required a skill set of handling livestock which would not have been very useful in defense against Indians in comparison to settlers with hunting skills or miners with strength and weapon like tools. Perhaps the only skill a cowboy would use is fleeing in which he obtained from chasing after cows.
Other misconceptions of the cowboy include comfortable living and romance. These factors were distorted through fictional novels, paintings, and other forms of art. Sure a cowboy could have a romantic lifestyle but it’s also likely that chasing women was not above the priority of chasing cows considering the job in which they partook in required a great deal of labor with very low pay. It would be hard to imagine that in truth cowboys lived comfortably. Somehow cowboys became the icon of the West when the majority of the West consisted of migrating families with more money than that of a cowboy, or people who were poor looking to become wealthy. It’s very possible that the false image of the heroic cowboy became the symbol of the West because he represented what the West wanted to: Strength, Bravery, Independence, Romance, Power, and Success.

The factor the contributed most to the ideal of the cowboy are strength and pride. Strength, which much was required to settle to the West, was viewed very positively through the idealistic cowboy who enticed people to settle to the Great Frontier when the idea of the abundant amount of strength required to succeed could have easily discouraged people from moving West. Seeing the results that mental and physical strength had on the cowboy made people look up to him in a desire to achieve the same quality of strength within them. With great strength comes great pride. Americans already being a prideful group of people could easily relate to the cowboy. This was the important quality that convinced people they could be like the idealistic figurehead considering he was an American just like the rest of them. It is through these qualities people look up to the cowboy because in some way whether it be strength, bravery, romance, or pride people look up to the pop culture’s hero, The Cowboy. 
 society often views the cowboy as much more super than he really was

No comments:

Post a Comment