The frontier thesis is the argument advanced by historian Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 that expresses how the idea of the frontier, as the meeting point between savagery and civilization, influenced the American culture by promoting individualistic democracy. He explains that expansion to the American West changed people's views on their own culture.
2. Trace the process which turner identifies as “Americanization.” How does that process proceed? What are the steps and stages along the way?
“Americanization” is the emergence of a distinct industrialized American culture out of primitiveness and savagery. First, the disintegration of savagery occurs when a trader enters the land of the “Indian and the hunter,” then the pastoral stage occurs and fails, leading to manufacturing organization with the city and factory system.
3. Turner is often identified as a “progressive” historian, meaning that he views history as the inevitable proves from chaos to improvement, with the underlying assumption that change is usually for the better. What “progressive” assessments of history appear in Turner’s thesis? Does he identify any threats to that process?
Turner expresses the progressive idea that with the frontier’s existence, the process of Americanization is inescapable and perpetual and that individualism will continue to flourish. He also explains, however, that with the end of the frontier’s existence, the first period of American history had come to a close, which was a majorly controversial statement.
4. Think about America in the 1890s. What are the major social changes shaping peoples’ lives during this era? How does Turner’s thesis reflect these changes, try to make sense of them, or sound a warning call for ways in which America might be losing its way as a result of the changes?
During the 1890s, industrialization,