Back East bookcover

Back East

How Westerners Invented a Region

This title will be released on:

Jul 15, 2025

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Description

Western imaginations of "Back East" rewrote America's cultural identity, shaping myths and realities alike

Just as easterners imagined the American West, westerners imagined the American East, reshaping American culture. Back East flips the script of American regional narratives.

In novels, travel narratives, popular histories, and dude ranch brochures, twentieth-century western US writers saw the East through the lens of their experiences and ambitions. Farmers following the railroad saw capitalists exploiting their labor, while cowboys viewed urban easterners as soft and effete. Westerners of different racial backgrounds, including African Americans and Asian Americans, projected their hopes and critiques onto an East that embodied urbanity, power, and opportunity.

This interplay between "Out West" and "Back East" influenced income inequality, land use, cultural identities, and national government. It fueled myths that reshaped public lands, higher education, and the publishing industry. The cultural exchange was not one-sided; it contributed to modern social sciences and amplified marginalized voices from Chicane poets to Native artists.

By examining how westerners imagined the American East, Back East provides a fresh perspective on the American cultural landscape, offering a deeper understanding of the myths that continue to shape it.

Product Details

PublisherUniversity of Washington Press
Publish DateJuly 15, 2025
Pages332
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9780295753867
DimensionsN/A
BISAC Categories: History, Literary Fiction

About the Author

Flannery Burke is associate professor of American studies at Saint Louis University. She is author of A Land Apart: The Southwest and the Nation in the Twentieth Century (University of Arizona Press, 2017) and From Greenwich Village to Taos: Primitivism and Place at Mabel Dodge Luhan's (University Press of Kansas, 2008).

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