Rules of a Western

Jun 27, 2007 10:11

coffeeem had an excellent entry yesterday about expanding the Western as a genre. It made me think about what I've been doing lately with Cowboys and Aliens and how I stumbled over the genre at the very beginning.

When I first started talking about the Cowboys and Aliens gig with Jeremy Mohler (who I also work with on Baeg Tobar), I got to thinking about ( Read more... )

cowboys and aliens, writing

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jeff_duntemann June 28 2007, 01:05:20 UTC
I don't recall where I read the definition, but the most concise way I could describe the Western is: "A tale of a new society coalescing in a sparsely populated land." Nothing in the society is routine, social hierarchies are still forming, opportunities are wide open, and the population front precedes the reach of centralized authority.

That said, I'm a bit of a strict constructionist on Westerns. The culture (and the metaphysics, if the story has any depth and you look closely) has a Celtic flavor and reflects a very particular level of technology. Machinery is scarce and expensive, and large animals are still an everyday part of life. (Today, most urbanites gasp when they see anything larger than a dog without bars in the way.)

What we may only be beginning to understand is that the American experience was special in some peculiar ways. North America may have been heavily populated by indigenous peoples before 1500, and by the time the English/Scots/Irish arrived in force circa 1620, a century of smallpox and other diseases brought by the Spanish had reduced the indigenous population by 90% or more. Had this not happened, the European settlement of North America would have been much slower-and a lot uglier.

An interesting question then becomes, What would European settlement have been like if there had been no indigenous people at all? I'm exploring that in the Drumlins universe, where there are no Indians and no (present) aliens, but leftover alien equipment that the unlettered settlers learn to use and quickly take for granted. My theory: The Indians were a unifying influence on the English-speaking Europeans, and in their absence the proto-Americans might have split into more factions and fought among themselves a great deal more.

"Western" is also code for "libertarian politics," and one way to avoid Trekkish political correctness.

Time's up tonight; must make dinner.

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alanajoli June 28 2007, 18:58:05 UTC
I agree on all counts, though I don't think I'd have been as eloquent. ;) While I'm writing for C&A, despite the fact that the storyline is going to take us all over the place, I want it to *feel* like a Western--which I think is that sense of culture, "libertarian politics," and sense of what's important. coffeeem has been talking a lot about people finding their place in the world because the world where they lived before wouldn't have 'em. Now that they've gone West, they've made good. I think that's another great theme to work with.

I also think that the idea that Seven Samurai could become The Magnificent Seven and they both work as great movies bears some consideration. I'm not sure what it implies yet, but it strikes me as significant.

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