“…But their songs were deeply introspective, and the Outlaw is often portrayed as someone who is aware of their shortcomings, seeking to remedy them, and certain that they will fall short in attempts at self‐improvement. The Outlaw is not just someone who retreats to the bottle, he is someone who “turns inward, searching for the source of his discontent, openly expressing his fears, standing alone in an unfriendly world and revealing his vulnerability” (Stimeling, 2013, p. 354). In the concluding section of this paper, we argue that this Outlaw attitude can be productively revised, to reveal a more liberatory form of resistant epistemology; but for now, let's focus on the world the Outlaws built, and their contribution to the vicious sedimentation of settler colonial imaginaries.…”