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“When You Call Me That …”: Tall Talk and Male Hegemony in The Virginian

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2020

Lee Clark Mitchell*
Affiliation:
Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey

Abstract

Owen Wister's The Virginian, considered the prototypical cowboy western, only vaguely satisfies formula expectations. Encounters consist more of wordplay than gunplay, and physical conflicts rarely occur. Far from depicting a conventional male violence tamed at last by a feminized East, the novel celebrates the Virginian's rhetorical triumph over the schoolmarm and the silencing of her feminism in favor of a “logic” of patriarchy. Why should this best-seller have established a formula it does not fulfill? One explanation may involve its setting in Wyoming—known as the “Equality State” for first having enfranchised women. By opposing a thesis of sexual inequality to that setting's implications, the novel could be read as two things at once: a paean to an older, masculine West and yet a brief for modern male hegemony. Readers troubled by a resurgent feminism could delight unawares in the novel's contradictions and read into it the formula western.

Type
Research Article
Information
PMLA , Volume 102 , Issue 1 , January 1987 , pp. 66 - 77
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1987

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