Studyspark Study Document

American Frontier and American Political Culture: What Term Paper

Pages:2 (732 words)

Sources:1

Subject:Politics

Topic:Political Culture

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#2284933


American Frontier and American Political Culture: What if anything has the frontier contributed to creating a distinctive American political culture?

The notion of a vast and limitless space known as the 'frontier' is a particularly unique aspect of our national political culture, a luxury of space and ideology enjoyed by America alone. Unlike the nations of Europe, only America has had a notion of an expansive, ever-stretching and vast territory with virtually elastic boundaries connected to its civilized, original core of thirteen colonies. The historian Frederick Turner once wrote: "Up to our own day American history has been in a large degree the history of the colonization of the Great West. The existence of an area of free land, its continuous recession, and the advance of American settlement westward, explain American development."(Turner, Chapter 1) America may have began as colonies, but its enrichment and spirit of capitalism is founded on a notion of colonizing a great and unsettled, uncivilized frontier.

True, the Native peoples of the Americans may have possessed the original and legitimate claim over such territory in retrospect. But at the time in the American political mind frame they did not -- unfairly, of course, but the notion of the frontier was ideological more than it was actual. And in the ideology of the American frontier, the West existed as a vast expanse, to which all Americans could flee to uncharted and unlawful places and make their fortunes. "Thus American development has exhibited not merely advance along a single line, but a return to primitive conditions on a continually advancing frontier line, and a new development for that area. American social development has been continually beginning over again on the frontier. This perennial rebirth, this fluidity of American life, this expansion westward with its new opportunities, its continuous touch with the simplicity of primitive society, furnishes the forces dominating American character." (Turner, Chapter 1) Primitive and pristine, the frontier in the American imagination was a place of masculine proving ground, where men could live, free from the civilizing constraints of laws and marriage.

This notion of the frontier reinforced the notion that government, any government or restriction by law was bad, and…


Sample Source(s) Used

Work Cited

Turner, Frederick. The Frontier in American History. Last Modified 1997. [7 May 2005] http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/TURNER/

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

American History Final Exam Stages of the

Pages: 10 (4609 words) Subject: American History Document: #90922817

American History Final Exam Stages of the American Empire Starting in the colonial period and continuing up through the Manifest Destiny phase of the American Empire in the 19th Century, the main goal of imperialism was to obtain land for white farmers and slaveholders. This type of expansionism existed long before modern capitalism or the urban, industrial economy, which did not require colonies and territory so much as markets, cheap labor and

Studyspark Study Document

Frontier Defense and the Open Door the

Pages: 5 (1577 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Literature Document: #31643126

Frontier Defense and the Open Door The Author's Thesis. Hunt's view of history and the world's events is that as an historian, he should go beyond researching "historical simplicities" - and that by grasping a more "authentic version" of history, a historian and his informed society can "better cope" with today's - and future - dynamics. Further, Hunt believes that there are "relatively narrow limits" within which one country can

Studyspark Study Document

American Culture of War

Pages: 3 (931 words) Sources: 1 Subject: Military Document: #66455266

Lewis, a. (2007). The American Culture of War. New York: Routledge Lewis offers the reader a wealth of strong research in the book, "The American Culture of War." The bulk of the book is dedicated to offering a critical look at American military policy and practices since 1945 stretching to the choices made in Iraq, up until 2005. In this book, Lewis offers his opinions and concerns about the All Volunteer

Studyspark Study Document

American Expansion Post-Reconstruction America Gave Rise to

Pages: 4 (1314 words) Sources: 3 Subject: American History Document: #51076484

American Expansion Post-Reconstruction America gave rise to an incredibly transformative society and culture. Modernism was beginning to sweep the land with the industrial revolution, urbanization and westward expansion. How did the underprivileged fare in this new America? What were the experiences and problems of the Native Americans, women, African-Americans, and various immigrant groups at this time? Be specific. Was there a gap between the rhetoric of hope and democracy peddled by

Studyspark Study Document

American Indian Movement

Pages: 6 (2030 words) Sources: 7 Subject: Native Americans Document: #81369738

American Indian Movement The poorest people in America are the American Indians and it is also a fact that Indian reservations have unique laws that has made it a nation by itself within the United States. The modern movements focus on the American Indian reservations being empowered by self-determination. This is important for the economic, social and cultural improvement of the American Indians. It was with the Nixon administration that the

Studyspark Study Document

American Cities Just As American

Pages: 4 (1368 words) Sources: 3 Subject: American History Document: #413236

The development of the American automobile industry is one of the best examples of this interplay: "Unlike European manufacturers, who concentrated on expensive motorcars for the rich, American entrepreneurs early turned to economical vehicles that could be mass-produced," (Jackson 159). The fact that so many Americans then became capable of purchasing a car both fed the notion of the American dream, and also served to expand American cities and

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".