How does 'The Mud Below' offer a revisionist
interpretation of the mythology of the west and western settlement?
Overview
- the story of Diamond Felts - a small
time bull rider who has a very troubled family past
- follows his story - from when he first
got onto a bull and held on for 8 seconds - described as 'the experience had
been exhilarating and unbearably personal' - through his times as a travelling
bull rider and a seemingly lonely life that is associated with it.
- story includes the hostile relationship
he has with his family - his mother did not want him to go to school to become
a bull rider, so resents him for going against her wishes - his father tells
Diamond that he isn't his father and then leaves them - Diamonds younger
brother looks up to him in some ways as he wants to be a bull rider like him,
but seems confused as he wants to stick up for his mum more - a focus on the
cowboys family a new concept?
Masculinity
- Cowboys/heroic figures were the height
of masculinity in Western novels/films
- "Proulx
rewrites the genre of the Western from a feminist perspective that deconstructs
the figure of the cowboy—an iconic image of US masculinity." - Arosteguy
- "Proulx’s male
characters, on the other hand, exhibit constructed and fluid masculinities"
- Arosteguy
- "His identification
with the bull introduces an important theme in the story as Diamond, for the
first time in his life, experienced a sense of power over others" - Rood
- Diamond Felts called
derogatory names - 'half pint' and 'shorty' - shows the lack of masculine
authority by the main character
- Mother is the main person to do this -
replaces his real name with 'Shorty' - "although they [mothers] recognise to some extent the
problem with dominant culture's strict definition of masculinity and seek ways
to remove their sons from this restrictive environment, the mothers do exhibit
signs that they too have internalised these ways of judging a man" -
"reinforces the underlying anxiety that forces him to pursue bull
riding" Arosteguy -
- Shows other weaknesses -
the rejection by his father plays an important and destructive role in Diamonds
life - "not your father and never was"
- "As a result of this
emotional trauma, Diamond is as stunted emotionally as he is physically, his
outward appearance mirroring the inner self" - Rood 'Understanding Annie
Proulx'
- Diamond gets hurt quite a
bit from his bull riding and does suffer from his injuries - something that is
not seen in Westerns - the hero recovers quickly
- tore the ligaments in his knee and
dislocates his shoulder, both from bull riding
Loneliness
- Travelling
- Cowboys usually lead a
lonely life - travel mostly by themselves for a long time - The Searchers -
Ethan Edwards visits his family after travelling for many years, and then
leaves at the end by himself
- Diamond does travel with
a couple of different companions - but does not respect them - Was annoyed a
Leccil when he went back home to settle down; he rapped his second companion,
Myron Sassers wife in the back of his truck; Pake Bitts was a Christian, but
Diamond was rude to him because of this - but he must of respected him to some
extent as he carried on with Diamond to the end of the tale - westerns did not
show this sort of disrespect in the friendship between cowboys
- Didn't stick around for
long - felt like they were of no use after they had helped or done their heroic
deed - can't stay in his mothers house for more than 4 days when he hurts his
knee, may be due to fact that the civilised old life is not what he wants, and
he prefers his wild, but lonely, lifestyle
- Proulx makes the point
that although some cowboys may talk about their family and how much they miss
them, they still choose to lead a lonely life on the road - "You all make
a big noise about family, what I hear, wife and kids, ma and pa, sis and bub.
But none of you spend much time at home and you never wanted to or you wouldn't
be in rodeo"
The
lifestyle of a rancher/cowboy
- Diamonds mother tried to
bring her sons up away from the rancher lifestyle - thinks it would mean that
they wouldn't amount to much - "No. You can't. You're going to college.
What is this, some kid thing you kept to yourself all this time? I worked life
a fool to bring you boys up in a town, get you out of the mud, give you a
chance to make something out of yourselves.." - "The mother figure,
in Proulx's work, is often plagued by extreme feelings of guilt because she has
failed to protect her son from falling victim to the allures of fantasy
life" - Arosteguy
- the mother figure is
rarely seen in Westerns - so we never see whether this sort of lifestyle was
accepted by them for their sons - adds an extra realistic layer of the story
- living on a ranch is
largely seen as a desirable thing to do in western mythology - Proulx puts
across the idea that this would not be true for everyone
Conclusion
- as a overall, it would
seem that Proulx is writing these stories to debunk the mythology of the West -
which would make her stories a revisionist reinterpretation of the Western
genre
- not all cowboys were tall, heroic and
didn't have emotional issues
- the lonely life of the cowboy did not make
you mysterious, it was quite depressing for these men
- the life of a rancher was probably not a
desired life to lead
- Diamonds mother plays
quite a big role in the story - shows how the role of women have a bigger
impact on men than represented in Western film/TV shows
- places the role of the
hero's family as a whole as a significant reason for the actions of the main
character - normally we see the hero as a singular figure with no background to
explain his actions
- "revealing the
inherent complexities involved in maintaining the successful image of the
cowboy—reveals just how implausible and problematic such a masculinity is. In
interrogating the cowboy figure’s inability to accommodate complexities of
globalization, amid other realities of twenty first- century America, Proulx
criticizes the mythology of the cowboy figure" - Katie O. Arosteguy
'Deconstructing the myth of the cowboy'
- "where descriptions
of the beautiful but forbidding landscape create a lyrical counterpoint to the
violence and tragedy of individual lives" - Rood 'Understanding Annie
Proulx'