Note: To help you prepare, you may read Judith Butler, Chapter I from Gender Trouble
A. The only thing a hunter, backwoodsman or mountain-man could trust was his gun
B. The only thing a hunter, backwoodsman or mountain-man could trust was what they could carry and their Bible
C. The only thing a hunter, backwoodsman or mountain-man could trust was his potables
D. To survive in the wilderness, one had to mitigate their Christian values
A. The former lived in the urban centers, the latter in wild nature
B. The former worked hard, the latter cheated
C. The former worked ethically, the latter only cared for money
D. The former was dressed in rags, the latter in riches
A. The Hopi Ogre
B. The tomahawk
C. Homosociality
D. The berdash
A. His skill in the harsh and dangerous profession of keelboatsmen
B. His skill in the harsh and dangerous profession of logging
C. His skill in shooting even better than Davy Crockett
D. His killing of even his own “son”
A. Their femininity that limits their capabilities
B. Their good heart deep inside
C. Their attack on Natives only, never whites
D. Their engagement with the U.S. Army
A. He didn’t do all the things he purportedly did as a lumberjack
B. He wasn’t the legend he was supposed to be
C. His story was commercially created, not by word-of-mouth
D. His masculinity was compromised by his gender-bending homosociality
A. Was the true terraformer, not Paul
B. Was really Betsy the Cow
C. Was diminutive compared to Paul
D. None of the above