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The cowboy remains today a feature of range life in western America, an iconic historiographical figure who has not only survived, but prospers in the 21st century. John Erickson takes a look at what defines the modern cowboy and at the place occupied by these remarkable people in contemporary society.
Ranch life --- Cowboys --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- West (U.S.) --- Social life and customs.
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In Ariana Huberman's manuscript titled Gauchos and Foreigners: Glossing Culture and Identity in the Argentine Countryside, she discusses the relationship between the gaucho figure and the 'foreigner' in Argentine rural literature from the turn of the nineteenth-century to the 1920's in order to explore the complexities of mutual cultural transformation in a literary genre and a region that thrives in binaries.
Argentine literature --- Gauchos in literature. --- National characteristics, Argentine, in literature. --- Gauchos --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Cowboys --- History and criticism. --- History. --- Hudson, W. H. --- Lynch, Benito, --- Gerchunoff, Alberto, --- Gershunoṿ, Alberṭo, --- גערשונאוו, אלבערטא --- גרשונו׳, אלברטו, --- Gerchunofe, Alberto, --- Lynch, Benito Eduardo, --- Harford, Henry, --- Hodson, Ṿ. H., --- Hudson, Guillermo Enrique, --- Hudson, William Henry, --- הודסון, וו. ה., --- Criticism and interpretation.
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Cowboys --- Regionalism --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Baroncelli, Folco de, --- Camargue (France) --- Île de la Camargue (France) --- La Camargue (France) --- Plaine de la Camargue (France) --- The Camargue (France) --- Social life and customs. --- History.
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He already owned and managed two ranches and needed a third about as much as he needed a permanent migraine: that's what Alan Day said every time his friend pestered him about an old ranch in South Dakota. But in short order, he proudly owned 35,000 pristine grassy acres. The opportunity then dropped into his lap to establish a sanctuary for unadoptable wild horses previously warehoused by the Bureau of Land Management. After Day successfully lobbied Congress, those acres became Mustang Meadows Ranch, the first government-sponsored wild horse sanctuary established in the United States.<
Mustang --- Wild horses --- Cowboys --- Ranchers --- Wildlife conservationists --- Ranch life --- Farm life --- Frontier and pioneer life --- Horse breeds --- Feral horses --- Feral livestock --- Feral mammals --- Horses --- Conservationists --- Ranchmen --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Farmers --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Conservation --- Government policy --- Day, H. Alan. --- South Dakota --- State of South Dakota --- Dakota Territory --- Social life and customs.
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Ranch life --- Cowboys --- United States Local History --- Regions & Countries - Americas --- History & Archaeology --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Farm life --- Frontier and pioneer life --- Erickson, John R., --- Crown Ranch (Okla.) --- Beaver County (Okla.) --- Social life and customs. --- Beaver Co., Okla. --- Erickson, John Richard,
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This contemporary "log of a cowboy," to borrow a term from Andy Adams, reveals the daily life of a cowboy during the years 1979-1981. "I came up one steer short, 158 instead of 159. I rode through them again and got another count, the same: 158. So I went back to the junkyard. This time, l walked it afoot, checking out every hiding place. I drove the steers out into the open. Still one short. Then I happened to look around and saw a steer peeking out over the steering. Wheel of one of the wrecked cars. He was inside the car and appeared ready to drive off." Cowboying on the LZ Ranch in the Texas Panhandle did have its lighter moments. In fact, humor was sometimes all that kept John Erickson and the Ellzey family going as they struggled through a depressed cattle market, drought, sickness, injuries, and West Texas weather:. "The temperature at noon was down to five degrees and the chill factor was minus thirty-seven. That is killing. Cold. It wasn't a fit day to be out, so naturally we went out to feed cattle. I wore my wool long johns, with six layers of clothes above the waist and three below. My outer shell was my big cowhide coat. We drove through the steers on wheat pasture in the morning. There really wasn't much we could do but Lawrence can't stand to sit around in a nice warm house while his cattle are out there suffering. If we couldn't make them comfortable, at least we could suffer with. Them."
Cowboys --- United States Local History --- Regions & Countries - Americas --- History & Archaeology --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Diaries. --- Diaries --- Erickson, John R., --- Texas Panhandle (Tex.) --- Panhandle (Tex. : Region) --- Social life and customs. --- Erickson, John Richard,
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Cowboys --- Ranch life --- Ranching --- United States Local History --- Regions & Countries - Americas --- History & Archaeology --- Cattle ranching --- Agriculture --- Animal culture --- Beef cattle --- Range management --- Farm life --- Frontier and pioneer life --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Social life and customs --- History --- Texas Panhandle (Tex.) --- Social life and customs. --- Panhandle (Tex. : Region)
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"An engaging, well-researched account of the private schools that proliferated in the interwar years in the American Southwest. Bingmann does an excellent job of situating these schools in the context of the history of American education.""-Lynn Dumenil, author of The Modern Temper: American Culture and Society in the 1920's
Cowboys --- Ranchers --- Ranch life --- Education --- Private schools --- Preparatory schools --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Ranchmen --- Farmers --- Children --- Education, Primitive --- Education of children --- Human resource development --- Instruction --- Pedagogy --- Schooling --- Students --- Youth --- Civilization --- Learning and scholarship --- Mental discipline --- Schools --- Teaching --- Training --- Academies (Private schools) --- Independent schools --- College preparatory schools --- Prep schools --- Private preparatory schools --- Social life and customs. --- Social aspects --- History. --- West (U.S.)
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Set in Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona, the stories are a loosely tied string of old timer's yarns with a continuing cast of engaging characters, whom Kiskaddon avoids reducing to cowboy stereotypes. They include, as Siems describes them, ""Kiskaddon himself as the character Shorty. As a common waddy with a small man's feistiness and a young man's mischief, Shorty encounters the wicked world with a succession of companions: Bill, high-headed and a bit of an outlaw; Rildy Briggs, untamable and unstoppable young cowgirl; and Ike, an old-fashioned dandy and 'a very fortunate person.' More
Cowboys. --- Ranch life. --- West (U.S.). --- Ranch life --- Cowboys --- American Literature --- English --- Languages & Literatures --- West (U.S.) --- Bronco busters --- Broncobusters --- Buckaroos --- Buckeroos --- Stockmen (Animal industry) --- Vaqueiros --- Vaqueros --- Cattle herders --- Horsemen and horsewomen --- Gauchos --- Farm life --- Frontier and pioneer life --- Overland journeys to the Pacific. --- Mormon Church --- Shoshoni Indians --- History. --- Social conditions. --- Government relations. --- United States. --- California National Historic Trail. --- Oregon National Historic Trail. --- Transcontinental journeys (United States) --- Travels --- Voyages and travels --- Shoshone Indians --- Snake Indians --- Indians of North America --- Numic Indians --- Shoshonean Indians --- Utah Superintendency (United States. Office of Indian Affairs) --- California Trail --- Saint Joe Road --- Oregon Trail --- Overland Trails
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