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                                                     Claude Lévi-Strauss, Will Wright and the American Western  117

                        Although, according to Wright, the last ‘transition theme’ Western was Johnny Guitar
                      in 1954, it appears clear, using his own binary oppositions and narrative functions,
                      that Dances  with  Wolves,made in 1990, is a perfect example of the form. A cavalry
                      officer, decorated for bravery, rejects the East (‘civilization’) and requests a posting to
                      the West (‘wilderness’) – as the film publicity puts it, ‘in 1864 one man went in search
                      of the frontier and found himself’. He also found society among the Sioux. The film tells
                      the story of how ‘he is drawn into the loving and honourable folds of a Sioux tribe . . .
                      and ultimately, the crucial decision he must make as white settlers continue their vio-
                      lent and ruthless journey into the lands of the Native Americans’ (Guild Home Video,
                      1991). His decision is to fight on the side of the Sioux against the ‘civilization’ he has
                      rejected. Finally, considered a traitor by the cavalry, he decides to leave the Sioux, so as
                      not to give the cavalry an excuse to butcher them. The final scene, however, shows his
                      departure as, unbeknown to him or the Sioux, the cavalry close in for what is to be
                      undoubtedly the massacre of the tribe.
                        If we accept Dances with Wolves as a ‘transition theme’ Western, it raises some inter-
                      esting  questions  about  the  film  as  myth.  Wright  (1975)  claims  that  each  type  of
                      Western ‘corresponds’ to a different moment in the recent economic development of
                      the United States:
                          the classic Western plot corresponds to the individualistic conception of society
                          underlying a market economy. . . . [T]he vengeance plot is a variation that begins
                          to reflect changes in the market economy. . . . [T]he professional plot reveals a new
                          conception  of  society  corresponding  to  the  values  and  attitudes  inherent  in  a
                          planned, corporate economy (15).

                      Each type in turn articulates its own mythic version of how to achieve the American
                      Dream:

                          The classical plot shows that the way to achieve such human rewards as friendship,
                          respect, and dignity is to separate yourself from others and use your strength as an
                          autonomous individual to succor them. . . . The vengeance variation ...weakens
                          the compatibility of the individual and society by showing that the path to respect
                          and love is to separate yourself from others, struggling individually against your
                          many and strong enemies but striving to remember and return to the softer values
                          of marriage and humility. The transition theme, anticipating new social values,
                          argues that love and companionship are available at the cost of becoming a social
                          outcast to the individual who stands firmly and righteously against the intolerance
                          and ignorance of society. Finally, the professional plot . . . argues that companion-
                          ship and respect are to be achieved only by becoming a skilled technician, who
                          joins an elite group of professionals, accepts any job that is offered, and has loy-
                          alty only to the integrity of the team, not to any competing social or community
                          values (186–7).

                        Given  the  critical  and  financial  success  of  Dances  with  Wolves  (winner  of  seven
                      Oscars; fifth most successful film in both the UK and the USA, grossing £10.9 million
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