This is the first book-length study to show how Cooper uses the Leatherstocking series as a touchstone to explore pre-Civil War America's perception of its past.
Kelly's historiographic approach to the Tales marks a significant departure from previous critical commentary on the stories: Other critics have centered either on the Tales' mythological status, on their relevance for an understanding of Jacksonian America, or on their aesthetic preconceptions. Kelly begins his innovative study by challenging the assumption that American writers of the eighteenth century lacked native models for their fiction.
He argues that rather than a void, Americans confronted two competing patterns of historical vision. In documents as diverse as John Winthrop's Journal, the Declaration of Independence, Emerson's Essays, and Lincoln's Second Inaugural, America is imagined as simultaneously free and bound, as a nation at once independent from history and organically linked to centuries of human development. Kelly shows that Cooper's fiction illustrates this characteristic perception of the past with an unparalleled clarity. Neither a defense of tradition nor an assault on entailment, his novels plot American history as a progressive development in the continuum of human events and as a departure from that process.
Philip Roth's bestselling alternate history—the chilling story of what happens to one family when America elects a charismatic, isolationist president—is soon to be an HBO limited series.
In Master Plots, Jared Gardner examines the tangled intersection of racial and national discourses in early American narrative.
William Blackstone (or Blaxton) was the man who planted that first apple grove in Boston, and it was he who greeted the new constituents of the Massachusetts Bay Colony as they scouted the area around Beacon Hill.
Schaefer, Michael. W. A Reader's Guide to the Short Stories of Stephen Crane. New York: G.K. Hall: 1996. Sorrentino, Paul. Student Companion to Stephen Crane. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2005. —, ed. Stephen Crane Remembered.
Dolores Tierney, New Transnationalisms in Contemporary Latin American Cinemas (Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press, 2018), 64. 118. Tierney, New Transnationalisms, 21. 119.Ana María Platas Tasende, Diccionario de términos ...
This book takes a fresh look at the papers in the context of the times in which they were created.
Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions, that are true to their ...
While other parts of the quilt are machine stitched, she stitched the stars by hand and she paid a great deal of attention to their detail.”17 I assert that Powers devoted much attention to the fabrication of the stars because they were ...
can 17 the woman she knew as her aunt - requires her to play a new role in relation to her former servants . ... The Davises initially reject this proposal ; they prefer to continue rehearsing the roles of servant and mistress to which ...
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