The development of the Code Duello in America is explored through the lens of cultural shifts following Reconstruction and westward expansion. The Civil War disrupted the duel's cultural support, yet its ethos persisted on the frontier. This study investigates the interplay between speech and physical actions within the Duello's codifications, revealing how its values shape conflict and violence in western literature and popular culture. The lasting impact of these ideals on contemporary views of conflict, gender, and individual societal roles is also examined.
Virgil Mathes Libri


Pistols at High Noon traces the development of the Code Duello, or code of the duel, in America as the cultural rules changed in the wake of Reconstruction and westward expansion. The Civil War deconstructed the cultural milieu that had supported the duel, but its ethos was carried west and continued to exert a cultural influence as the frontier expanded. Implicit in this examination is a rhetorically based inquiry into the dynamic relationship between speech acts and physical acts and the way the two are culturally mediated through the codifications of the Duello. This dissertation examines how the values privileged by the Code Duello affect conflict and violence throughout western literature and popular culture, and continue to influence society's ideas about conflict, gender, and the individual's relationship within society even today