There's no Bigfoot?

It's one thing to doubt the existence of God, but this?
Crosscut archive image.

Bigfoot.

It's one thing to doubt the existence of God, but this?

The Sunday New York Times spoiled my morning. No, it wasn't details of Wall Street's continuing criminality or news of a daycare fire, awful as those are. But rather a book review by Florence Williams of Bigfoot: The Life and Times of a Legend by Joshua Blu Buhs. I haven't read the book, but the premise is offensive: It assumes that Bigfoot ain't real.

Even worse, it assigns the hairy one's popularity to class rage among poor whites in the Pacific Northwest and other rural areas. Says the review: "Buhs's...serious interest lies not in the ape but in the white working-class men who were the beast's advocates, hoaxers, hunters and most ardent consumers." That's right, not only is Bigfoot a fake, he's trailer trash America's way of fighting back against the upper class:

Buhs argues compellingly that Bigfoot'ꀙs heyday in the 1960s and '70s was a difficult time for white, rural men in America. They were threatened by women's rights, civil rights and service-oriented, materialist culture that didn't value working with one's hands or backwoods know-how. Believing in Bigfoot was a way to snub effete, skeptical scientists. Hunting him re-engaged their imperiled backcountry survival skills. And the hoaxers? Well, they were having a laugh while manipulating a hostile consumer culture.

So, Bigfoot is a part of the culture war? A con-job perpetrated by Pat Buchanan voters?

The '60s and '70s weren't nearly as hard on Bigfoot's advocates as they were on the ape himself: turned into a pointy-headed comedic movie character, transformed into an inter-dimensional and shape-shifting space traveler, pressed by a shrinking wilderness increasingly inhabited by people with no sense of mystery or adventure. Bigfoot's no legend; he's just keeping one step ahead of the Twittering masses.

No wonder he relocated to Mars.

  

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About the Authors & Contributors

Knute Berger

Knute Berger

Knute “Mossback” Berger is Crosscut's Editor-at-Large.