Guide to
Life and Literature
of the
Southwest
By J. Frank Dobie
J. Frank Dobie (1888-1964) was already widely known as a Texas author and folklorist when he first published his Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest in 1943. The Guide evolved from notes Dobie had collected and revised over the previous dozen or so years. It served as the basis for a class which he then taught at the University of Texas in Austin. It was further refined and significantly expanded for republication in 1952. The text for the online edition which follows is derived from the 1952 version of Dobie's work.
The Guide, as Dobie was the first to point out, is "fragmentary, incomplete, and in no sense a [comprehensive] bibliography" of Southwestern culture. Rather, it is a commentary and listing of a miscellany of writings on the Southwest that Dobie considered "good reading." The Guide's purpose, according to Dobie, was primarily: to help people of the Southwest learn more of the land to which they belong, to make their past more alive, to bring them to a realization of the values of their own cultural inheritance, and to stimulate them to observe.
By nature, any such work becomes dated, as many new titles are added which often provide deeper insight into new aspects of Southwestern history and culture. Nevertheless, Dobie's Guide remains an important work, written in a witty style, and conveniently organized into almost three dozen categories that cover virtually every aspect of Southwestern culture. Many of the titles reviewed by Dobie continue to be referenced in modern bibliographies, and will forever remain as primary sources which cover the period in which the Southwest was won. Almost without exception, the titles that form the core of Southwestern Classics On-Line will be included in Dobie's Guide.
A Preface with Some Revised Ideas
Chapter 1 -- A Declaration
Chapter 2 -- Interpreters of the Land
Chapter 3 -- General Helps
Chapter 4 -- Indian Culture; Pueblos and Navajos
Chapter 5 -- Apaches, Comanches, and Other Plains Indians
Chapter 6 -- Mexican-Spanish Strains
Chapter 7 -- Flavor of France
Chapter 8 -- Backwoods Life and Humor
Chapter 9 -- How the Early Settlers Lived
Chapter 10 -- Fighting Texians
Chapter 11 -- Texas Rangers
Chapter 12 -- Women Pioneers
Chapter 13 -- Circuit Riders and Missionaries
Chapter 14 -- Lawyers, Politicians, J.P.'s
Chapter 15 -- Pioneer Doctors
Chapter 16 -- Mountain Men
Chapter 17 -- Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail
Chapter 18 -- Stagecoaches, Freighting
Chapter 19 -- Pony Express
Chapter 20 -- Surge of Life in the West
Chapter 21 -- Range Life: Cowboys, Cattle, Sheep
Chapter 22 -- Cowboy Songs and Other Ballads
Chapter 23 -- Horses: Mustangs and Cow Ponies
Chapter 24 -- The Bad Men Tradition
Chapter 25 -- Mining and Oil
Chapter 26 -- Nature; Wild Life; Naturalists
Chapter 27 -- Buffaloes and Buffalo Hunters
Chapter 28 -- Bears and Bear Hunters
Chapter 29 -- Coyotes, Lobos, and Panthers
Chapter 30 -- Birds and Wild Flowers
Chapter 31 -- Negro Folk Songs and Tales
Chapter 32 -- Fiction-Including Folk Tales
Chapter 33 -- Poetry and Drama
Chapter 34 -- Miscellaneous Interpreters and Institutions
Chapter 35 -- Subjects for Themes