Date Thesis Awarded
7-2012
Access Type
Honors Thesis -- Access Restricted On-Campus Only
Degree Name
Bachelors of Arts (BA)
Department
English
Advisor
Christy L. Burns
Committee Members
Christopher J. MacGowan
Colleen Kennedy
Arthur Knight
Abstract
In order to most accurately convey what McCarthy, a man who believes "there's no such thing as life without bloodshed," is getting at, I must first examine the Western genre and how this conceptualizes its chief protagonist "the cowboy." From here I turn to an examination of how identity is formed from the perspective of McCarthy's white male cowboys, focusing on how the places that they come from and their experiences have led them to become the men who they are. Bearing this in mind I will then discuss the trilogy's peripheral characters, including Mexicans, indigenous people, and women. Despite their relative lack of development as characters, they often challenge and deepen our understanding of McCarthy's universe. We come to see that despite our cowboy protagonist's best efforts to achieve the romantic visions of their imaginations, they ultimately can do nothing but fail.
Recommended Citation
Chaney, Matthew Miles, ""No Order Save That Which Death Has Put There": Identity Formation In Cormac McCarthy's Border Trilogy" (2012). Undergraduate Honors Theses. William & Mary. Paper 537.
https://scholarworks.wm.edu/honorstheses/537
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This work is licensed under a
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Comments
Thesis is part of Honors ETD pilot project, 2008-2013. Migrated from Dspace in 2016.