ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1967. In this critical survey of the fiction of James Fenimore Cooper, George Dekker devotes a good deal of attention to Cooper’s politics. He also explores the assimilation and development of the historical novel as first perfected by Sir Walter Scott. Cooper’s major formal innovations in the field of historical fiction were, like Scott’s, something more than mere experiments: they were made because American social and political developments differed radically from those of Scott’s Europe and so demanded a different formal expression.

chapter

Introduction

chapter I|19 pages

Coopers, Jays, And De Lanceys

chapter III|21 pages

The Pioneers

chapter IV|20 pages

Race In The New World

chapter V|20 pages

The Prairie

chapter VI|9 pages

An American Gentleman In Europe

chapter VII|14 pages

Buccaneers Of The Land And Sea

chapter VIII|14 pages

The European Novels

chapter IX|20 pages

Home As Found

chapter X|9 pages

The Pathfinder: Leatherstocking In Love

chapter XI|22 pages

The Deerslayer

chapter XII|26 pages

The Late Sea Novels

chapter XIII|18 pages

The Littlepage Trilogy

chapter XIV|24 pages

The Ways Of The Hour