Cattle/Popular culture: Difference between revisions
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imported>Stephen Ewen (''The Cow Puncher'' by Robert J. C. Stead) |
imported>Stephen Ewen (→Literature: 'Pete Cow Puncher: A Story of the Texas Plains'' by Joseph B. Ames) |
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==Literature== | ==Literature== | ||
''The Cow Puncher'' by Robert J. C. Stead[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19173] | ;''The Cow Puncher'' by Robert J. C. Stead[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19173] | ||
;''Pete Cow Puncher: A Story of the Texas Plains'' by Joseph B. Ames | |||
===Nursery rhymes=== | ===Nursery rhymes=== |
Revision as of 01:35, 1 June 2007
As one of the longest-domesticated animals, cows have played a significant role within Western popular culture. Sometimes carrying the power of life-directing myth, and sometimes merely depicted so as to evoke a hearty belly laugh, they have been portrayed in art, nursery rhymes, language idioms, advertisements, and cartoons and comics since the early 1800s.
Cows in the myth of the American West
Literature
- The Cow Puncher by Robert J. C. Stead[1]
- Pete Cow Puncher: A Story of the Texas Plains by Joseph B. Ames
Nursery rhymes
- The cow jumped over the moon
Language idioms
- Until the cows come home
- Cash cow
- How now brown cow?
- Holy cow
- Have a cow
- A sacred cow
- Cow-punch
- As awkward as a cow on roller skates
Film
- Barnyard
- Cow and Chicken
Comics
- The Far Side
- London's Times
- The Man-Eating-Cow (Tick Comics)
Advertisements
- BMW
- Borden - Elsie the Cow
- Chik-fil-a - The "Eat More Chikin" cows
Music
- The Dead Milkmen (band)
- Pink Floyd, Atom Heart Mother
Other
- Cow tipping
- Furniture
- Postage stamps
- I Never Saw a Purple Cow
- Dropping the Cow (comedy troupe)[2]