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Mountain Masculinity: Twenty-Three: Sawback and the Sporting Proposition

Mountain Masculinity
Twenty-Three: Sawback and the Sporting Proposition
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Foreword
  4. Introduction
  5. One: Fifth Avenue Pilgrims Amid the Goats
  6. Two: This Guiding Game
  7. Three: The Last Great Buffalo Drive
  8. Four: “William, Prepare My Barth”
  9. Five: Us Winter Sports
  10. Six: Rams
  11. Seven: Tepee Tales
  12. Eight: An Early Ski Attempt on Mt. Ptarmigan
  13. Nine: Pipestone Letters No. I
  14. Ten: An’ All We Do Is Hunt
  15. Eleven: The Latest From Pipestone
  16. Twelve: Dried Spinach or Moose Steak?
  17. Thirteen: Tex Reads His Permit
  18. Fourteen: The Guide Knows Everything
  19. Fifteen: Tex: Gentleman’s Gentleman
  20. Sixteen: It’s Good to Be Alive
  21. Seventeen: Tex Takes a Trophy
  22. Eighteen: Sawback Cleans a Laker
  23. Nineteen: Sawback Changes His Mind
  24. Twenty: Tex Tangles With Horribilis
  25. Twenty-One: Navigatin’ for Namaycush
  26. Twenty-Two: What’s in a Name?
  27. Twenty-Three: Sawback and the Sporting Proposition
  28. Twenty-Four: The Wild Goose Chase by ‘Ramon Chesson’
  29. Twenty-Five: It’s a Woman’s World
  30. Appendix A: Tex Vernon-Wood
  31. Appendix B: A Gift from Grandad Vernon-Wood
  32. Index

TWENTY-THREE

Twenty-Three SAWBACK AND THE SPORTING PROPOSITION

Tex plays riffs all up and down the scale of language in this piece in a virtuoso register worthy of English satirist P.C. Wodehouse. The Indian fishing story trades on stereotypes about Aboriginal people as fascinating and yet uncultured, certainly, but it also gently lampoons the “sportsmanlike” fishing of the white protagonists with a slightly grudging nod to the efficiency and practicality of Aboriginal food-gathering. One senses here a form of reverse Romantic sensibility about the Noble Savage but this time the “Siawash” [aboriginal people], ironically called “noble aborigine.;],”1 are the really sensible ones; while white fishermen insist on “sporting” conduct in an impractical way.

—AG and JR


1. See note 34 on page 27 for a discussion of the term “Siwash.”

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