Women in the Western Genre

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Ever since the early 20th century, there had been several attempts and experimentation in creating a new genre of cinema known as the Western. The first well-known Western movie The Great Train Robbery (1903), while not necessarily being the first ever Western, it is by both film historians and theorists definitely considered the pinnacle of the genre, that got it all started and that would be the first step in creating others similar to it, but also very different. Because it was still an unknown genre in film, there had not yet been established a set of rules as for how to construct films in this new experimental genre so change was to be expected.

One of the most significant changes in the genre through the years is how the role of women tended to shift over the course of time with each new Western, thus still obtaining the traditional aspiring schoolteacher from the East who has no idea of the ways of the West, that takes on the role of the “good woman”, while also a new addition is presented as well: the fallen woman – but not only is the introduction of these new personalities and traits of these familiar roles vital, but also the conflicts and encounters between these different types of women, particularly the proper and the fallen.

In the Western genre, the woman is most definitely a powerful and influential character. This can be seen in Hell's Hinges, where the good woman, Faith, who simply desires the best for her brother Robert, influences early on one of the main would-have-been villains in the movie – Blaze – with the power of love – but not only was Blaze influenced by a woman; Robert was influenced as well by the woman in the bar, having him drink as much as possible, as a part of a plan to intoxicate and bre...

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...ereotypes. Another difference is the wedding in the very beginning, instead of being happy and joyful, that is where all the trouble began.

In conclusion, as the Western genre was still being fully developed through the years, not only did it transition from the traditional “Cowboys and Indians” theme to a great variety of other themes, but also the stereotypical approaches for roles that were once seen fit for the genre had also went through several changes, in turn creating strong, independent women that fought for – and even alongside – their husbands or partners, rather than the genre standing still with what it already had and continuing on from the early would-be prototype models.

Works Cited

Richard Slotkin john fords stagecoach and the mythic space of western movie

robert shulman introduction and notes to the virginian

BFI Film Classics HigH Noon

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