Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 77

Calamity Jane 73 appearing in a dress only once. She wields a bull^^ilip, which she uses to snatch off Bill Hickok’s hat, possibly a gesture of symbolic castration. Louisa Cody (Helen Burgess), Buffalo Bill’s (James Ellison) young, genteel wife, mirrors the grotesque Calamity. Louisa is kindhearted, domestic to the core, and she abhors violence. She announces early on that she intends to tame Buffalo Bill. By comparison. Calamity Jane is brash, uncouth, and brazen. The first time Calamity sees Louisa, she assumes she is with Bill Hickok, clearly her love interest. “Is that chipmunk yours?” she quips. Louisa tries several times to “tame” Calamity, even loaning her dresses. Calamity resists, though, and suffers for her truculence in the end. The social and political ideology of DeMille sought to promote lies in the social fabric of the audience he addressed. The most significant social event of that period was the Great Depression. The 1929 stock market crash shocked the American people who had put their faith in capitalism. Many sought scapegoats. The rural conservatives ^\ilo had joined the revitalized Ku Klux Klan during the 1920s blamed northeastern banks, foreigners, African Americans, and liberated women for the economic calamity. Celebrations of individualism, nostalgia for a simpler, rural past and yearning for basic American virtues punctuated social life. Patriotic celebrations emphasized historical characters such as the pioneer. Americans wanted heroes—strong men who by the force of their will could rescue their society. Besides the Depression, the specter of Hitler loomed on the horizon. Between 1929 and 1933, Hitler’s Nazi Party rose to power. Hitler was a charismatic dictator served by armies of Brown Shirts and Black Shirts. His seemingly magical ability to manipulate th H