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Memory and myth at the Buffalo Bill Museum
by
Ott, Brian L.
, Dickinson, Greg
, Eric, Aoki
in
20th century
/ American frontier
/ American history
/ American Indians
/ Anglo Americans
/ Buffalo Bill Cody
/ Childhood
/ Cody, William F (Buffalo Bill) (1846-1917)
/ Fiction
/ Historic artifacts
/ Land Settlement
/ Masculinity
/ Mass media images
/ Memory
/ Motion pictures
/ Museum exhibits
/ Museums
/ Mythology
/ National Identity
/ Nationalism
/ Native Americans
/ Novels
/ Personal profiles
/ Personality
/ Psychological Needs
/ Public figures
/ Public Memory
/ The American West
/ United States History
/ Violence
/ Visitors
/ Weapons
/ White people
/ Whiteness
2005
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Memory and myth at the Buffalo Bill Museum
by
Ott, Brian L.
, Dickinson, Greg
, Eric, Aoki
in
20th century
/ American frontier
/ American history
/ American Indians
/ Anglo Americans
/ Buffalo Bill Cody
/ Childhood
/ Cody, William F (Buffalo Bill) (1846-1917)
/ Fiction
/ Historic artifacts
/ Land Settlement
/ Masculinity
/ Mass media images
/ Memory
/ Motion pictures
/ Museum exhibits
/ Museums
/ Mythology
/ National Identity
/ Nationalism
/ Native Americans
/ Novels
/ Personal profiles
/ Personality
/ Psychological Needs
/ Public figures
/ Public Memory
/ The American West
/ United States History
/ Violence
/ Visitors
/ Weapons
/ White people
/ Whiteness
2005
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Do you wish to request the book?
Memory and myth at the Buffalo Bill Museum
by
Ott, Brian L.
, Dickinson, Greg
, Eric, Aoki
in
20th century
/ American frontier
/ American history
/ American Indians
/ Anglo Americans
/ Buffalo Bill Cody
/ Childhood
/ Cody, William F (Buffalo Bill) (1846-1917)
/ Fiction
/ Historic artifacts
/ Land Settlement
/ Masculinity
/ Mass media images
/ Memory
/ Motion pictures
/ Museum exhibits
/ Museums
/ Mythology
/ National Identity
/ Nationalism
/ Native Americans
/ Novels
/ Personal profiles
/ Personality
/ Psychological Needs
/ Public figures
/ Public Memory
/ The American West
/ United States History
/ Violence
/ Visitors
/ Weapons
/ White people
/ Whiteness
2005
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Journal Article
Memory and myth at the Buffalo Bill Museum
2005
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Overview
Few places tell the myth of the American frontier more vigorously than the Buffalo Bill Museum does in Cody, Wyoming. Traveling to the museum through the 'Western' landscape of Wyoming into the foothills of the Rockies prepares visitors for the tale of Western settlement. This narrative, which works to secure a particular vision of the West, draws upon the material artifacts of Cody's childhood and his exploits as scout, Pony Express rider and showman. The museum retells the story that Cody first told to millions at the turn of the twentieth century in his Wild West arena show. In this paper, we argue that the museum privileges images of masculinity and Whiteness, while using the props, films, and posters of Buffalo Bill's Wild West to carnivalize the violent conflicts between Anglo Americans and Native Americans.
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