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The Conservative Aesthetic: Theodore Roosevelt, Popular Darwinism,
and the American Literary West offers an alternative origin story
for American conservatism, tracing it to a circle of writers,
artists, and thinkers in the late nineteenth century who yoked
popular understandings of Darwin to western literary aesthetics.
That circle included writer Owen Wister, artist Frederic Remington,
entertainer William "Buffalo Bill" Cody, historian Frederick
Jackson Turner, and a young Theodore Roosevelt. The book explores
how their lives and their writing intertwined with their
conservative sensibilities. For them, going west was akin to time
travel, a retrogression into an earlier and hardier age. It was
through those retrogressions into the American state of nature,
they imagined, that society could discover its finest and fittest
citizens. Such a society would be the modern realization of Thomas
Jefferson's century-old dream of a "natural aristocracy." Theirs
was a new conservatism, rooted not in a history of European
monarchy but rather in stories about American individualism and the
frontier west, updated for the age of Darwin.
The Conservative Aesthetic: Theodore Roosevelt, Popular Darwinism,
and the American Literary West offers an alternative origin story
for American conservatism, tracing it to a circle of writers,
artists, and thinkers in the late nineteenth century who yoked
popular understandings of Darwin to western literary aesthetics.
That circle included writer Owen Wister, artist Frederic Remington,
entertainer William "Buffalo Bill" Cody, historian Frederick
Jackson Turner, and a young Theodore Roosevelt. The book explores
how their lives and their writing intertwined with their
conservative sensibilities. For them, going west was akin to time
travel, a retrogression into an earlier and hardier age. It was
through those retrogressions into the American state of nature,
they imagined, that society could discover its finest and fittest
citizens. Such a society would be the modern realization of Thomas
Jefferson's century-old dream of a "natural aristocracy." Theirs
was a new conservatism, rooted not in a history of European
monarchy but rather in stories about American individualism and the
frontier west, updated for the age of Darwin.
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