Cowboy Essays

  • The Black Cowboy

    1182 Words  | 3 Pages

    period in regards to African Americans. In 2005, the Idaho Black History Museum (IBHM) in Boise assembled a display that incorporated the black cowboy into it. The West has always held the promise of opportunity for countless Americans. While many African Americans struggled to find the equality promised to them after the Civil War, in the West black cowboys appeared to have created some small measure of it on the range. Despite this, their absence from early historical volumes has shown that tolerance

  • Analysis Of Cowboys

    1919 Words  | 4 Pages

    What is a cowboy? Who are they? Elmer Kelton’s novel The Day the Cowboys Quit and The Old Chisholm Trail depict cowboys as workers who round-up cattle and relocate them from one place to another as needed. Like everyday workers, cowboys have their own unique personalities. Ranging from hot temper to calm and understanding. For the most part, cowboys have their own issues just as any workplace would. When this occurs there needs to be a leader to take charge in order to fix or control a situation

  • Cowboys Westward Expansion Cowboys In The Old West

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    the west. Cowboys Westward Expansion Cowboys in the Old West were not all giddy and heroic. They had jobs to do that were difficult and did not have a lot of leisure time. On the silver screen, cowboys were portrayed as old, fighting men. In reality, they were usually just reaching adulthood and did not have their own family. Although there were not many African American and Hispanic cowboys in the movies, they made up a large amount of the cowboys in reality. During the spring, cowboys would move

  • Ameican Cowboys

    1527 Words  | 4 Pages

    Ameican Cowboys Have you ever wondered who the cowboys were; how they lived; or what they did? The American Cowboy's way of life was interesting and unique, and they contributed more to society than one might think. Besides looking after stock and driving cattle, they had to round up huge numbers of cattle for ranchers. This paper will examine the American cowboy's character, what they wore, the everyday things they did like driving cattle and branding calves and the lawlessness of the old west

  • Mad Cowboy

    2443 Words  | 5 Pages

    Mad Cowboy “Even if animal testing produced the cure for Aids, we’d be against it” This rhetoric notion was stated by PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) and summarizes the fanatical doctrine animal rights activists preach to their followings. These activists preach a doctrine of hate calling for the end of all meat eating, wearing of fur, use of animals in experiments regardless if they are beneficial or not, and even push for the end of all pets as we know of it. Howard Lyman

  • The Cowboy Figure

    1458 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Cowboy Figure The figure of the cowboy is prominent, not only in America’s history, but also in contemporary society. The cowboy has always been regarded as the epitome of freedom, machismo and individuality, and his character maintains a certain romantic quality about it. Riding the range with his trusty horse, forging the frontier, and exposing himself to the mercy of the wilderness, the cowboy lives for himself alone and yet he lives the life about which the rest of society can only

  • The Cowboy Research Paper

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    During this period, many Native Americans lost their homelands and their way of life. To begin with, the population of the western area was growing with many different walks of life. One lifestyle in particular that gained popularity was of the cowboys. The cowboys derived from Hispanic and Southern American cultures as well as their clothes, food, language, and values. they were responsible for the new way of Western-style ranching and cattle-handling. The traditional image of a

  • The Invisible Black Cowboys

    3835 Words  | 8 Pages

    The Invisible Black Cowboys For many Americans, the image of the cowboy evokes pleasant nostalgia of a time gone by, when cowboys roamed free. The Cowboy is, to many Americans, the ideal American, who was quick to the draw, well skilled in his profession, and yet minded his own business. Regardless of whether the mental picture that the word cowboy evokes is a correct or incorrect view of the vocation, one seldom views cowboys as being black. The first cowboy I met was from Texas and was black

  • The True American Cowboy

    2063 Words  | 5 Pages

    The True American Cowboy As the twentieth century approached, America was experiencing a time of considerable expansion. All eyes were looking for ways to make the United States a larger, more powerful, and more efficient country. Because of this wave in American society, there was no movement given more devotion than the settling of the West. The range-cattle industry in its various aspects, and in its importance to the United States and particularly to the Great Plains, has been a subject of

  • Essay About Cowboys

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    The myths surrounding cowboys have been around long before there were ever any actual cowboys. However, they weren’t used in regards to cowboys, but for knights in the medieval period. In that time period knights were seen as the brave, chivalric heroes that came to the damsel’s rescue; just like cowboys on TV today. Historians say that the cowboy myths were started because they embodied American values and represented the ideal American: brave, strong, and most importantly white. In books and

  • Cowboy Ghost Sparknotes

    1027 Words  | 3 Pages

    The book that i chose to do this speech on is Cowboy Ghost. Cowboy Ghost is about a boy named Titus who goes on a cattle drive through Florida in the early 1900s. The main character in this story is Titus. Titus Timothy MacRobertson is a small and weak 16 year old boy that wants to impress his father that kind of ignores him. His mother died giving birth to him and his father “blames” Titus for her death. His father (Rob Roy MacRobertson) is a strong, massive and hardworking man. His brother Micah

  • The Cowboy: In terms of masculinity

    1961 Words  | 4 Pages

    stereotypical western cowboy and the two main characters Jack Twist and Ennis del Mar of the short story “Brokeback Mountain” by Annie Proulx and its movie adaption by Ang Lee. This paper will analyze how the author, Annie Proulx, defies masculine cowboy norms when writing such an extravagant love story about two cowboys falling in love through an unexpected consultation. Ultimately, this paper will analyze the key differences, both physical, and emotional between the stereotypical western cowboy and the cowboys

  • Rodeos and Cowboy Boots

    1424 Words  | 3 Pages

    Cowboy boots have been represented continuously in cultural history dating back to the 1860's. Since then an evolving american culture has shaped what cowboy boots represent, as well as our perception of what mean within culture. The perception of cowboy boots has changed since the 1860's, within the limitations and boundaries in a specific culture.Therefore I consider how have the patterns and rituals of attending/competing in rodeos become associated with the consumption of cowboy boots? How does

  • Igler's 'Industrial Cowboys'

    668 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Industrial Cowboys, Igler offers a study on the advances of Miller and Lux, dating back from the time they started in the Gold Rush era to the end of their campaign in the 1920s. Igler’s book studies the firm’s logistical structure as well as change in the San Joaquin valley environment, the political economy of California as a state and labor interactions. Igler does a superb job explaining how these two German immigrants rose to the top of the meatpacking business through the use of primary

  • The Bad And The Stereotypes Of Cowboys

    984 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Good, The Bad, and the Stereotypes Cowboys. To many they are the noble warriors in an untamed land, the men of justice, and the greatest legends that the Wild West has to offer. But in the quest for riches, many a film has overlooked their true nature; to such an extent that society has forgotten truth and accepted fiction. Now, this isn’t the only case of the bending of the truth and reality to fill the public hunger for heroism (and the coffers of Hollywood), and as long as humans continue

  • The Day The Cowboys Quit Essay

    962 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Day The Cowboys Quit, is a historical fiction, based on the cowboy strike of 1883 at old Tascosa in the Texas Panhandle. The strike was the effect of the policies that were beginning to show up in Texas ranching at the time. Small ranchers we’re becoming less and less numerous as the larger ranchers squashed competition through underhanded methods. This book takes place in a time when America was growing and experiencing many changes, especially with regards to businesses. The large cattle ranches

  • King Of The Cowboys Research Paper

    749 Words  | 2 Pages

    The King of the Cowboys and the Queen of the West...Roy Rogers and his wife, Dale Evans In 1943, Republic Studios declared Roy Rogers the King of the Cowboys and his root 'em toot em pardner was his own cowgirl sidekick and wife, Dale Evans, Queen of the West. During the 1930s to 1940s, this singing western duo became the most popular cowboy and cowgirl the world has ever known. The two appeared together in some 100 films. Between 1951-1957, they sashayed on over to television where Rogers starred

  • The Cowboy Language of the Western Genre

    886 Words  | 2 Pages

    When people hear the phrase “Howdy, Partner!” they often will associate that phrase with the sublime Western genre. Along with similar settings and themes in all writings of the Western genre, there is also a similar language that stories share. Common themes of the stories include remote western American towns with the cattle culture, plots with a simple hero versus villain conflict, or a protagonist’s encounters with different cultures like the Indians or Mormons. These heroes often will have to

  • The Day The Cowboys Quit Chapter Summary

    1538 Words  | 4 Pages

    Tascosa, The Day the Cowboys Quit is a historical fictional phenomenon written by the award-winning western novelist, Elmer Kelton. Born in a place called Horse Camp of the Five Well Ranch and being a native Texas, Kelton was an American journalist and writer is widely regarded as the Greatest Western Writer of all time by the Western Writers of America, Inc. He has written over 50 western novels and this being one of them. The Day the Cowboys Quit is based on the true events of cowboy strikes in 1883

  • Legendary Bill Pickett: Black Cowboy

    504 Words  | 2 Pages

    The true story of legendary Bill Pickett, a Black Cowboy who invented the technique of bulldogging and was featured in the Wild West Shows. BRIEF SYNOPSIS: VESTER PEGG, a white cowboy tells his story to a young writer about the legendary rodeo black cowboy BILL PICKETT, aka Dusky Demon. Bill invented the technique of bulldogging that became well celebrated. Famous for his ability to bring down and wrestle a bull with his hands and teeth, Bill, is featured in the 101 Wild West shows of the early