Film and the American Moral Vision of Nature

Film and the American Moral Vision of Nature Theodore Roosevelt to Walt Disney

Hardback (30 Jun 2011)

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Publisher's Synopsis

With his square, bulldoggish stature, signature rimless glasses, and inimitable smile - part grimace, part snarl - Theodore Roosevelt was an unforgettable figure, imprinted on the American memory through photographs, the chiselled face of Mount Rushmore, and, especially, film. At once a hunter, explorer, naturalist, woodsman, and rancher, Roosevelt was the quintessential frontiersman, a man who believed that only nature could truly test and prove the worth of man.

A documentary he made about his 1909 African safari embodied aggressive ideas of masculinity, power, racial superiority, and the connection between nature and manifest destiny. These ideas have since been reinforced by others - Jesse "Buffalo" Jones, Paul Rainey, Martin and Osa Johnson, and Walt Disney.

Using Roosevelt as a starting point, filmmaker and scholar Ronald Tobias traces the evolution of American attitudes toward nature, attitudes that remain, to this day, remarkably conflicted, complex, and instilled with dreams of empire.

Book information

ISBN: 9781611860016
Publisher: Michigan State University Press
Imprint: Michigan State University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 791.43636
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 250
Weight: 747g
Height: 254mm
Width: 178mm
Spine width: 23mm