
An Autobiography of Buffalo Bill (Colonel W. F. Cody): A Frontier Memoir of Pony Express Rides, Plains Scouting, Bison Hunts, and Wild West Spectacle
Synopsis
An Autobiography of Buffalo Bill recounts Cody's rise from Kansas boyhood, Pony Express rider, scout, buffalo hunter, and Civil War-era frontiersman to the impresario of Buffalo Bill's Wild West. Written in a plain, episodic, self-dramatizing style, it belongs to the nineteenth-century tradition of frontier memoir and popular adventure, where personal recollection, national mythmaking, and theatrical self-fashioning intertwine. Its value lies not only in its events but in its performance of the American West as spectacle. William F. Cody, known worldwide as Buffalo Bill, lived at the junction of history and legend. His experiences as army scout, plainsman, and showman furnished the raw material for a public persona amplified by dime novels, newspapers, and his own touring exhibitions. The autobiography reflects a man conscious that his life had become symbolic, shaped by expansion, conflict with Native peoples, military service, commerce, and entertainment. Readers interested in frontier literature, American celebrity, or the construction of national mythology will find this book indispensable. It should be read critically, but also appreciatively, as a vivid primary document of how the West was remembered, marketed, and transformed into enduring cultural drama.
Publisher information
- Publisher: e-artnow
- ISBN: 9788027382552
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 7 mm
- Weight: 198g
- Languages: English