Inglés para viajeros II: 14/11/2019
Hoy vamos a hablar de los Estados Unido, aunque lo haremos al mismo tiempo que repasemos algunas cosas de gramática. Leeremos un texto y veremos unos videos sobre la frontera.
The American frontier comprises the
geography, history, folklore, and cultural expression of life in the forward
wave of American expansion that began with English
colonial settlements in the early 17th century and ended with
the admission of the last remaining western territories as states in 1959. This
era of massive migration and settlement was particularly encouraged by
President Thomas Jefferson following the Louisiana Purchase, giving rise to the expansionist philosophy
known as "manifest destiny".
A
"frontier"
is a zone of contact at the edge of a line of settlement. Leading
theorist Frederick Jackson Turner went deeper,
arguing that the frontier was the defining process of American civilization: he
asserted that "The
frontier promoted the formation of a composite nationality for the American
people." He theorized that it was a process of development: "This perennial
rebirth, this fluidity of American life, this expansion westward...furnish[es]
the forces dominating American character."] Turner's
ideas since 1893 have inspired generations of historians (and critics) to
explore multiple individual American frontiers, but the popular folk frontier
concentrates on the conquest and settlement of Native American lands
west of the Mississippi River, in what is now the Midwest, Texas,
the Great Plains, the Rocky
Mountains, the Southwest, the West Coast, and Hawaii.
In
19th- and early 20th-century media, enormous popular attention was focused on
the Western United States in the second
half of the 19th century and the early 20th century, from the 1850s to the
1910s, a period which is sometimes
called the "Old West"
or the "Wild West".
Such media typically exaggerated the romance, anarchy, and chaotic violence of
the period for greater dramatic effect. This eventually inspired the Western genre
of film, which spilled over
into television shows, novels, and comic books, as well as children's toys, games and costumes.
As
defined by Hine and Faragher, "frontier history tells the story of the
creation and defense of communities, the use of the land, the development of
markets, and the formation of states." They explain that "It is a
tale of conquest, but also one of survival, persistence, and the merging of
peoples and cultures that gave birth and continuing life to America."] Through
treaties which were signed
with foreign nations and native tribes,
political compromise, military conquest, establishment of law and order, the
building of farms, ranches, and towns, the marking of trails and digging of
mines, and the pulling in of great migrations of foreigners, the United States
expanded from coast to coast, fulfilling the dreams of manifest destiny.
Turner, in his "Frontier Thesis" (1893), theorized that the frontier was a process
that transformed Europeans into a new people, the Americans, whose values focused on equality,
democracy, and optimism, as well as individualism,
self-reliance, and even violence.
As
the American frontier passed into history, the myths of the West in fiction and
film took a firm hold in the imagination of Americans and foreigners alike. In
David Murdoch's view, America is exceptional in choosing
its iconic self-image: "No other nation has taken a time and place from
its past and produced a construct of the imagination equal to America's
creation of the West."
Taken and adapted from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_frontier
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