Audubon frontiersman
Audubon the Naturalist: A History of His Life and Time. Vol. 2 (of 2) · Herrick, Francis Hobart
Why did Audubon feel the need to create a "frontiersman" persona for his European audiences? Discuss how his self-styled image as an American woodman contributed to the commercial success of The Birds of America.
Audubon, you've painted quite the romantic picture of necessity, but let's probe what you're not telling us. Who were these London "gentlemen" you're describing, and what colonial fantasies were they buying into. Your buckskin performance worked precisely because Europeans already had expectations about what an "authentic American" should look like. But here's the uncomfortable question: while you were entertaining drawing rooms with tales of sleeping under stars, whose lands were you actually traversing. Which indigenous voices guided your expeditions but never appeared in your subscriber lists. You claim this wasn't artifice, yet you clearly understood the commercial value of playing the noble savage to European sensibilities. The real tension isn't whether your frontier experience was genuine—it's how you packaged American wilderness as a commodity for foreign consumption while erasing the people who actually knew those forests intimately.
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