Thursday, May 30, 2019
Frederick Jackson Turnerââ¬â¢s Reliance on the Myth of an Unoccupied Americ
The limit Thesis has been very influential in peoples understanding of American values, government and culture until sanely recently. Frederick Jackson food turner outlines the frontier thesis in his essay The Significance of the Frontier in American History. He argues that expansion of society at the frontier is what explains Americas individuality and ruggedness. Furthermore, he argues that the communitarian values experienced on the frontier carry over to Americas unique status on democracy. This idea has been pervasive in studies of American History until fairly recently when it has come under scrutiny for numerous reasons. In his essay The dogfight with Wilderness or, Getting Back to the ill-timed Nature, William Cronon argues that many scholars, Turner included, fall victim to the false notion that a pristine, untouched wilderness existed earlier European intervention. Turners argument does indeed rely on the idea of pristine wilderness, especially because he fail s to notice the serious impact that subjective Americans had on the landscape of the Americas before Europeans set foot in America. Turner fails to realize the extent to which Native Americans existed in the Wilderness of the Americas before the frontier began to advance. Turners thesis relies on the idea that easterners in moving to the wild unsettled lands of the frontier, shed the trappings of civilization and by reinfused themselves with a vigor, an independence, and a creative thinking that the source of American democracy and national character. (Cronon) While this idea seems like a satisfying theory of why Americans are unique, it relies on the notion that the Frontier was an area of free land, which is not the case, undermining the the... ...icans lived in and tamed the land around them millennia before European settlers arrived.Works CitedCronon, William The Trouble with Wilderness or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature ed., Uncommon Ground Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90Denevan, William M. The Pristine Myth The Landscape of the Americas in 1492. The Pristine Myth The Landscape of the. blue Arizona University, Web. 25 Mar. 2014. Krech, Shepard. The Ecological Indian Myth and History. New York W.W. Norton &, 1999. Print.Solnit, Rebecca. Spectators. Savage Dreams A Journey into the Hidden Wars of the American West. San Francisco Sierra Club, 1994. 228-47. Print.Turner, Frederick Jackson. The Significance of the Frontier in American History, Learner Primary Sources. Annenberg Learner, Web. 25 Mar. 2014.
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