Film, Video Cowboy Poetry: History, Origins, Influences, Forms
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About this Item
Title
- Cowboy Poetry: History, Origins, Influences, Forms
Summary
- David Stanley discusses the history and development cowboy poetry in American culture as part of the Benjamin Botkin Lecture Series sponsored by the American Folklife Center. Stanley has been researching cowboy poetry for nearly 20 years. Cowboy poetry in the United States dates back to the period of the long-distance cattle drives from Texas to Kansas that followed the Civil War, and it has been a thriving and ever-changing tradition ever since. As a genre, it has been influenced by literary works - the Bible, the Odyssey, Shakespeare's plays, the works of the Beat Generation - by popular writers such as Robert W. Service and Rudyard Kipling, by Victorian popular culture and its fondness for schoolhouse and parlor recitations, by Hollywood cowboy films, by country-western music and by political developments from the advent of homesteading and barbed wire in the 19th century to contemporary vegetarianism, environmentalism and economic development associated with the "New West."
Names
- Library of Congress
- American Folklife Center, sponsoring body
Created / Published
- Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, 2006-09-14.
Headings
- - Biography, History
- - Culture, Performing Arts
- - Literature
- - Poetry
- - Culture, Folklife
Notes
- - Classification: General Works.
- - Classification: Geography, Anthropology, Recreation.
- - Classification: Language and Literature.
- - David Stanley.
- - Recorded on 2006-09-14.
- - Kids, Families.
Medium
- 1 online resource
Digital Id
Library of Congress Control Number
- 2024698373
Online Format
- video
- image