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Claude Lévi-Strauss, Will Wright and the American Western 115
particular patterns. Seen in this way, the anthropologists’ task is to discover the under-
lying ‘grammar’: the rules and regulations that make it possible for myths to be mean-
ingful. He also observes that myths are structured in terms of ‘binary oppositions’.
Dividing the world into mutually exclusive categories produces meaning: culture/
nature, man/woman, black/white, good/bad, us/them, for example. Drawing on
Saussure, he sees meaning as a result of the interplay between a process of similarity
and difference. For example, in order to say what is bad we must have some notion of
what is good. In the same way, what it means to be a man is defined against what it
means to be a woman.
Lévi-Strauss claims that all myths have a similar structure. Moreover, he also claims
– although this is by no means his primary focus – that all myths have a similar socio-
cultural function within society. That is, the purpose of myth is to make the world
explicable, to magically resolve its problems and contradictions. As he contends,
‘mythical thought always progresses from the awareness of oppositions toward their
resolution. ...The purpose of myth is to provide a logical model capable of overcom-
ing a contradiction’ (224, 229). Myths are stories we tell ourselves as a culture in order
to banish contradictions and make the world understandable and therefore habitable;
they attempt to put us at peace with ourselves and our existence.
In Sixguns and Society,Will Wright (1975) uses Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist methodo-
logy to analyse the Hollywood Western. He argues that much of the narrative power
of the Western is derived from its structure of binary oppositions. However, Wright dif-
fers from Lévi-Strauss in that his concern ‘is not to reveal a mental structure but to show
how the myths of a society, through their structure, communicate a conceptual order
to the members of that society’ (17). In short, whereas Lévi-Strauss’s primary concern
is the structure of the human mind, Wright’s focus is on the way the Western ‘presents
a symbolically simple but remarkably deep conceptualisation of American social
beliefs’ (23). He contends that the Western has evolved through three stages: ‘classic’
(including a variation he calls ‘vengeance’), ‘transition theme’ and ‘professional’.
Despite the genre’s different types, he identifies a basic set of structuring oppositions,
shown in Table 6.1. But, as he insists (taking him beyond Lévi-Strauss), in order to
fully understand the social meaning of a myth, it is necessary to analyse not only its
binary structure but its narrative structure – ‘the progression of events and the resolu-
tion of conflicts’ (24). The ‘classic’ Western, according to Wright, is divided into sixteen
narrative ‘functions’ (see Propp, 1968):
Table 6.1 Structuring oppositions in the Western.
Inside society Outside society
Good Bad
Strong Weak
Civilization Wilderness (49)