"Hoo-Doo Cowboys and Bronze Buckaroos" undertakes an
interdisciplinary exploration of the African American West through
close readings of texts from a variety of media. This approach
allows for both an in-depth analysis of individual texts and a
discussion of material often left out or underrepresented in
studies focused only on traditional literary material. The book
engages heretofore unexamined writing by Rose Gordon, who wrote for
local Montana newspapers rather than for a national audience;
memoirs and letters of musicians, performers, and singers (such as
W. C. Handy and Taylor Gordon), who lived in or wrote about touring
the American West; the novels and films of Oscar Micheaux;
black-cast westerns starring Herb Jeffries; largely unappreciated
and unexamined episodes from the golden age of western television
that feature African American actors; film and television westerns
that use science fiction settings to imagine a postracial or
postsoul frontier; Percival Everett's fiction addressing
contemporary black western experience; and movies as recent as
Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained."
Despite recent interest in the history of the African American
West, we know very little about how the African American past in
the West has been depicted in a full range of imaginative forms.
"Hoo-Doo Cowboys and Bronze Buckaroos" advances our discovery of
how the African American West has been experienced, imagined,
portrayed, and performed.
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