Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Defending the West: John Ford and the Creation
of the Epic Western
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. The Blessings of Civilization: John Ford's
Stagecoach
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. John Ford's Revolutionary Americans: Drums
Along the Mohawk
Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Modernity and the Destruction of Boundaries:
John Ford's The Grapes of Wrath
Chapter 6 Chapter 5. On the Threshold of Modernity: John Ford's How
Green Was My Valley
Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Heroes and Political Communities in John
Ford's Westerns: The Role of Wyatt Earp in My Darling
Clementine
Chapter 8 Chapter 7. The Western and the Western Drama: John Ford's
The Searchers and the Oresteia
Chapter 9 Chapter 8. Heroic Virtue and the Limits of Democracy in
John Ford's The Searchers
Chapter 10 Chapter 9. Honor, Duty, and Civic Virtue: John Ford's
Mr. Roberts and The Last Hurrah
Chapter 11 Why it is Tough to be the Second Toughest Guy in a Tough
Town: John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
Sidney A. Pearson, Jr. is professor emeritus of political science at Radford University and editor of The Constitutional Polity: Essays on the Founding Principles of American Politics.
As we are on the threshold today of what may prove to be
revolutionary changes in the American regime, it is entirely
fitting that Sidney Pearson calls our attention back to the
cultural revolution of the 1960s, by way of looking to the director
whose films most effectively and artfully probed the issues at
stake in America's cultural revolution from the perspective of
heroic America. It is also fitting that Pearson approaches the
films of such a great director with such a talented lineup of
essayists, including some of our most interesting commentators on
political philosophy and culture. For all who admire Ford's work,
and especially for those of us who draw on it in our courses, this
is an important and compelling collection.
*Ronald J. Pestritto, author of Woodrow Wilson and the Roots of
Modern Liberalism and America Transformed: The Rise and Legacy of
American Progressivism, Hillsdale College*
Although the marriage of political philosophy and film seems like a
dubious exercise at best, these deftly crafted and persuasively
argued essays show that the films of John Ford are as much
entertainment as they are profound meditations on the nature and
the meaning of the American experiment in self-government. One
should go farther to say that in the absence of a keen
understanding of American culture and political philosophy each of
these authors bring their their analyses, we might never adequately
appreciate and understand Ford's accomplishments. Ford's creations
emerge at a critical time in American history, just as the cultural
revolution of the 1960s gathered steam, when the meaning of America
may have been indelibly transformed. These essays invite us to
ponder, as Ford himself seems to have done, whether that
transformation is in accord with our best hopes or our worst
fears.
*Eduardo Velásquez, Washington and Lee University*
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