Guest Blogger Laura Browder: Sarah Palin: A “Pioneer Mother” in Hockey Mom’s Clothes?
Palin is only the most recent version of the “pioneer mother” who was nostalgically invoked by writers like William W. Fowler, whose 1878 Woman on the American Frontier glorified women with muskets at their side who lulled their babies to sleep — in sharp contrast to “her delicate sisters of modern days.” No matter how maternal these women might have been, they were tough—Fowler’s examples included one Mrs. Noble, who in 1644 killed a moose to feed her children, or the Kentucky woman who in 1792 bit a musket ball into pieces in order to shoot more Indians. The widely publicized photographs of Palin field-dressing a moose would have fit right into Fowler’s account.
But Fowler was not alone. Actually, his was only one expression of a widespread concern: that white women of Anglo-Saxon descent were committing “race suicide” by giving birth to fewer children — a direct result, many cultural commentators thought, of city living and over-education. The remedy: strenuous living for women as well as men. Theodore Roosevelt strengthened popular associations of the West with wildness, freedom and adventure — and he publicly supported the women’s hunting craze of the late nineteenth century. Flip through an issue of Field and Stream from that period and you will see gun ads featuring sturdy women tramping through the wilderness with their rifles and their hunting dogs. Palin is in many ways the embodiment of twenty-first century strenuous living: she runs marathons, shoots wolves (albeit from a helicopter), and affects folksy speech patterns, eschewing educated diction whenever possible. And no one could accuse Sarah Palin of not doing her part to keep up the birth rate.
No: even those glasses — and her trademark red pumps — align her symbolically with the most famous armed woman this country has known: Annie Oakley, star of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West, who opposed female suffrage, insisted on riding
Sarah Palin’s appeal comes from the way she combines the contemporary — the hockey mom — with a persona that invokes a nostalgic vision of the frontier. It remains to be seen whether audiences will find the image of the Christian, gun-toting pioneer mother as compelling in 2008 as they did in 1888.
Laura Browder
Virginia Commonwealth University
author of Her Best Shot: Women and Guns in America