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Preface | ||
1 | Cowboy Poetry Then and Now: An Overview | 1 |
2 | Making Something Fine | 22 |
3 | Why Cowboy Poetry? Some Thoughts toward an Answer | 31 |
4 | "The Rain Is the Sweat of the Sky": Cowboy Poetry as American Ethnopoetics | 39 |
5 | The Tradition of Cowboy Poetry | 52 |
6 | Cowboy Poetry: A Poetry of Exile | 62 |
7 | Change and Oral Tradition in Cowboy Poetry | 73 |
8 | Cowboy Libraries and Lingo | 88 |
9 | Orderly Disorder: Form and Tension in Cowboy Poetry | 107 |
10 | Poems and Songs on the Rodeo Trail | 125 |
11 | Hitching Verse to Tune: The Relationship of Cowboy Song to Poetry | 135 |
12 | Cottonseed Cake and Pickups: Where Cowboy Poetry Comes From | 142 |
13 | A Montana Cowboy Poet | 153 |
14 | "Some Folks Wouldn't Understand It": A Study of Henry Herbert Knibbs | 175 |
15 | Ray Lashley: An Interview with a Frontier Reciter | 186 |
16 | The Makin's of a Cowboy Poet | 201 |
17 | Families, Neighbors, and Friends: The Tradition of Cow-Country Poetry | 215 |
18 | Nature and Cowboy Poetry | 226 |
19 | Women and Cowboy Poetry | 239 |
20 | A New Wind Out of the West: The Poetry of Contemporary Ranch Women | 247 |
21 | Levantando Versos and Other Vaquero Voices: Oral Traditions of South Texas Mexican American Cowboys | 261 |
22 | Cows and Logs: Commonalities and Poetic Dialogue among Cowboys and Loggers in the Pacific Northwest | 273 |
23 | The Poetic Tradition of the Gaucho | 299 |
24 | Australian Bush Poetry | 315 |
25 | Cowboys, Folklorists, Authenticity, and Tourism | 341 |
26 | Cowboy Poetics at the Millennium | 351 |
27 | Making Ourselves at Home | 363 |
Contributors | 371 | |
Index | 377 |
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Add Cowboy Poets and Cowboy Poetry, In bunkhouses or rodeo arenas, on the trail or around the campfire, cowboys have been creating and reciting poetry since the 1870s. In this comprehensive overview, folklorists, scholars, and cowboy poets join forces to explore the history and development , Cowboy Poets and Cowboy Poetry to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Cowboy Poets and Cowboy Poetry, In bunkhouses or rodeo arenas, on the trail or around the campfire, cowboys have been creating and reciting poetry since the 1870s. In this comprehensive overview, folklorists, scholars, and cowboy poets join forces to explore the history and development , Cowboy Poets and Cowboy Poetry to your collection on WonderClub |