Literary Hub

What Happened to the Classic Western? It Got Better

For tens of thousands of years, human beings have been using fictional devices to shape their worlds and communicate with one another. Four thousand years ago they began writing down these stories, and a great flourishing of human achievement began. We know it today as literature, a term broad enough to encompass everything from ancient epic poetry to contemporary novels. How did literature develop? What forms has it taken? And what can we learn from engaging with these works today? Hosted by Jacke Wilson, an amateur scholar with a lifelong passion for literature, The History of Literature takes a fresh look at some of the most compelling examples of creative genius the world has ever known.

Jacke continues the Thursday Theme for November with a look at a genre that began in the 19th century and nearly dominated the 20th: the Western. What happened to western fiction? What was a “classic western” and why did it disappear? And what reinventions of the genre are happening now? Anna North, author of the forthcoming novel Outlawed, joins us to help sort through these questions, and to talk about a reimagined western she admires, C. Pam Zhang’s How Much of These Hills Is Gold.

From the episode:

Jacke Wilson: If I were to pick up a Western from the 50s, I’m sure there would be parts in it that would just make me cringe, either because the stereotypes would be so clumsy or there would be such an assumed kind of attitude toward Native Americans or people of color, or something else that would just make me cringe. Part of reading a contemporary work by a 21st-century author is hopefully that they will avoid that kind of cringe-worthy moment where they’re making these assumptions. But the other thing that is even better, I think, is that it adds these layers of complexity and you feel like you’re learning so much more, and you feel like you’re seeing things from a different way, and it just makes the reading experience that much deeper. It sounds like that’s what we could expect from a book like How Much of These Hills Is Gold.

Anna North: Definitely. When people think of a conventional Western, it’s like white dudes with guns and they’re shooting. And then if, for example, Indigenous people appear, they’re probably heavily stereotyped, they might be dressed in clothes they would never wear in that time period or in that place. They might be either a villain or they just get killed off. Other than that, it’s basically just white guys shooting each other, probably. I think the strength of How Much of These Hills Is Gold—and there have been a number of other books, and also movies and TV to some degree that have said, look, there was never a universe where it was just these white guys in the American West and then maybe an occasional supporting player that’s this heavily stereotyped Native American person. This has always been a diverse place. There were always tons of stories there, tons of different stories, tons of fascinating stories.

What you were saying reminded me of something that people say a lot about journalism, but I think it’s true in fiction too, around diversity and representation—that diversity and representation aren’t just a moral imperative. It is good and moral to have diverse books and diverse writers and diverse perspectives, but it’s also a quality thing. You’re just going to have better literature and a better literary canon if it is a more diverse one. That goes back to what you were saying about the richness of stories and the nuance of stories is that we just have a better, richer, more nuanced array of stories to read and look at, when we recognize that some of the stories that we were told. And I should own, as a white person, the stories that have been told by white people and valorized by white people, including white women, that these stories are not the only stories. And by contrast, perhaps they’re a very, very small part of the real story that’s always been going on.

Jacke Wilson: Right. People might think, oh, you update the Western genre, so here’s what you do. You have a woman who can drink the men under the table and she can shoot better than any of the men. She’s actually braver, and they make her sheriff. And that’s all you need to do. And instead, what we’re talking about here is something that’s much more historically interesting and realistic and just gives real layers of people of that time and how things actually were during that period.

________________________

Subscribe now on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Android, Stitcher, or wherever else you find your podcasts!

Anna North is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and the author of two previous novels, America Pacifica and The Life and Death of Sophie Stark, which received a Lambda Literary Award in 2016. She has been a writer and editor at Jezebel, BuzzFeed, Salon, and the New York Times, and she is now a senior reporter at Vox. She grew up in Los Angeles and lives in Brooklyn.

The post What Happened to the Classic Western? It Got Better first appeared on Literary Hub.

More from Literary Hub

Literary Hub25 min read
A New Story By Rachel Kushner: “The Mayor of Leipzig”
Cologne is where cologne comes from. Did you know that? I didn’t. This story begins there, despite its title. I had flown to Cologne from New York, in order to meet with my German gallerist—Birgit whose last name I can’t pronounce (and is also the na
Literary Hub4 min readCrime & Violence
What Jeffrey Sterling Wants Americans to Understand About Whistleblowers
Hosted by Paul Holdengräber, The Quarantine Tapes chronicles shifting paradigms in the age of social distancing. Each day, Paul calls a guest for a brief discussion about how they are experiencing the global pandemic. On Episode 138 of The Quarantine
Literary Hub3 min read
Does the Simon & Schuster Acquisition Signal an Antitrust Crisis in Publishing?
The coronavirus pandemic is dramatically disrupting not only our daily lives but society itself. This show features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the deeper economic, political, and technological consequenc

Related Books & Audiobooks