I’m past being in college, but I appreciate the suggestion.
A lesson in cultural history wouldn’t change what I’m saying anyway. Once upon a time, what you said was true. Americans by and large were proud of the frontier and all that went into it. It’s why we saw such a massive cultural influx of entertainment and music and literature based around it for decades.
But the shifting view of it is the reason why we saw all of that die down. I don’t know what version of America you think we’re all living in anymore, but the only folks out here who still hold a burning and passionate reverence for America’s Frontier era are those who were either alive at the time it was so idealized in culture or are younger but no less nostalgic for that time.
That is not a large sample of folks.
As a I said before, the way we read our past today is different than it was back in the time. I am very confident in saying that with each passing generation, pride in the frontier myth and a belief that it defines our identities fades further and further away. There will be a time in the not so distant future where the age of the frontier is viewed with the same complete indifference as the post-Revolution but pre-expansion days of our history are.
I’m not claiming the era was not notable or important. But I am saying that most Americans today have no reverence for it, and they haven’t for quite some time.
Disney is responding to that. And frankly, the response is retaining more of the foundational ideas of Frontierland than one would reasonably expect them to given how far people have strayed from holding any pride in them.