New Essays on The Last of the MohicansH. Daniel Peck Cambridge University Press, 27 mrt 1992 - 143 pagina's The Last of the Mohicans is the most widely-read and internationally acclaimed of James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking tales, and has traditionally been regarded as an exciting and well-made adventure story. In recent years, however, critics have found in this classic tale of colonial warfare deeper levels of meaning. In the introduction to this volume, H. Daniel Peck studies these developments by tracking critical responses to the novel from the time of its publication in 1826 to the present day. The essays that follow present contemporary reassessments of The Last of the Mohicans from a variety of critical perspectives. |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 36
Pagina 1
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
Pagina 12
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
Pagina 16
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
Pagina 27
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
Pagina 30
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
De content van deze pagina is beperkt.
Inhoudsopgave
The Wilderness of Words | 25 |
History | 47 |
How Men and Women Wrote Indian Stories | 67 |
Cooper | 87 |
6 | 109 |
The Lesson of the Massacre | 115 |
Notes on Contributors | 139 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
American Literature American Novel animal battle Bay Psalm Book Baym beaver blood body British century characters Chingachgook civilization claim Cooper's Fiction Cora and Alice Cora's critics cultural Daniel Peck David Gamut death Deerslayer Delaware disguised dispossession Duncan Heyward Dwight enemy England English Essays European father female Fiedler forest Fort William Henry French frontier gender Glens Falls Hawk-eye Heckewelder hero Hobomok Hope Leslie human Huron identity imagination Indian stories James Fenimore Cooper Jonathan Carver killing Lake landscape language Last laws Leatherstocking Leatherstocking tales Magawisca Magua marriage Massacre McWilliams miscegenation Mohicans Montcalm Montesquieu Munro myth nation native Natty Bumppo Natty's natural Oswego Pathfinder Philbrick Pioneers political published Puritan race racial readers rescue romance savage scalp scene seems setting sexual skin Slotkin suggests tion Uncas Uncas's University Press Vattel violence warfare warrior Wayne Franklin white women wilderness William Henry woman woods World of James writing York