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James F. Cooper (1789-1851): The Pioneers

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James F. Cooper (1789-1851): The Pioneers American Literature I 11/01/2004 Cecilia H.C. Liu Facts on James Fenimore Cooper (1) Cooper was born James Cooper on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: James F. Cooper (1789-1851): The Pioneers


1
James F. Cooper (1789-1851) The Pioneers
  • American Literature I
  • 11/01/2004
  • Cecilia H.C. Liu

2
Facts on James Fenimore Cooper (1)
  • Cooper was born James Cooper on September 15,
    1789 in Burlington, New Jersey. (The "Fenimore"
    was legally added only in 1826.)
  • In 1790 the family moved to Lake Otsego, in
    upstate New York, and these early experiences in
    a frontier town gave him the background for The
    Pioneers (1823), among other frontier novels.

3
Facts on James Fenimore Cooper (2)
  • In 1819, his career as a writer began, and the
    first tale he published in 1820 was Precaution, a
    novel of morals and manners which showed the
    influence of Amelia Opie (whose work Cooper very
    much admired).
  • Later, since the work and its reception were
    pleasant enough to encourage JFC to continue, he
    continued on writing, publishing The Spy A Tale
    of the Neutral Ground (1821), The Pioneers, The
    Pilot (1824), Lionel Lincoln (1825), The Last of
    the Mohicans (1826), The Prairie (1827),with
    remarkable explosion of creativity.

4
Facts on James Fenimore Cooper (3)
  • Cooper was also a keen observer of the political
    and cultural life of America, an accomplished
    controversialist and a fine naval historian.
  • By the time of his death Cooper had developed a
    reputation as America's "national novelist," and
    D. H. Lawrence portrayed his work as "a
    decrescendo of reality, and a crescendo of
    beauty," but all his novels engaged historical
    themes and helped to form the American history
    and romantic historiography in the 19th century.

5
The Pioneers Background Info.
  • In 1785, Coopers father, wanted to investigate a
    a piece of land in this wilderness, Otsego, with
    a party of surveyors.
  • At the commencement of the following year,
    settlement began and from that time to this the
    country has continued to flourish and increase in
    number.

6
Cooper's Natty Bumppo
  • Natty Bumppo, as described in The Pioneers as 6
    ft. tall in his moccasins, thin and wiry, with
    grey eyes, sandy hair, a large mouth and rather
    heavy eyebrows."
  • He appears physically as a cross between his best
    friend, the Indian Chingachgook, and his nemesis,
    Judge Temple.

7
Bumppos various names in Leather-Stocking
Tales
  • Deerslayer
  • Hawk-eye
  • Pathfinder
  • Leather-Stocking

8
Leather-Stocking Tales (in the order of events
in the life of Natty Bumppo)
  • The Deerslayer (1841)young hero
  • The Last of the Mohicans (1826)mature hero
  • The Pathfinder (1840)come into maturity
  • The Pioneers (1823)heros old age
  • The Prairie (1827)heros death
  • Coopers novels reflect his continuous awareness
    of contrasts in society, behavior, and government
    between the United States and Europe,
    particularly Great Britain.

9
Natty Bumppos Views in Ch 3 (I)
  • He implores the group to see that men should only
    kill and use the wilderness to sustain
    themselves.
  • In essence, man should only take what he truly
    needs. However, the chapter ends with the eyes of
    the dead pigeons staring up at the men, Natty
    becomes the one who understands the virtuous
    relationship between man and the environment.

10
Natty Bumppos Views in Ch 3 (II)
  • While the settlers see wilderness as being tamed
    by their presence, Natty Bumppo has a vision of
    civilized life coexisting with nature.
  • Natty Bumppo, additionally, wants to keep the
    unique role that this vast unexplored wilderness
    contributes to the complexity of America.

11
Coopers Intention in Natty Bumppo
  • A critic, James Wallace, writes that Cooper
    wanted Natty Bumppo to combine a popular
    tradition of the eloquence of Indian oratory with
    the garrulity of a frontier character.
  • Natty Bumppo is Cooper's tool to express his
    views on the mores of 18th and early 19th
    century U.S. Natty Bumppo agrees with the concept
    of a firmly class-structured society, and shows
    disdain for miscegenation.
  • Fearless and miraculously resourceful, Natty
    Bumppo survives the rigors of nature and the
    villainy of man by superior strength and skill,
    and by the help of heaven, for he is always
    quaintly moral.

12
Coopers Intention in Natty Bumppo (2)
  • Nonetheless, Natty Bumppo is filled with
    contradictions, combining "the soul of a poet
    with the nature of a redneck."
  • Natty craves companionship, but trusts no one, is
    used by all, but owes nothing to anyone, and
    craves traditional society while fearing and
    despising civilization.
  • According to Duncan Heyward, Natty is "a noble
    shoot from the stock of human nature, which never
    could attain its proper elevation and importance,
    for no other reason than because it grew in the
    forest."

13
Perspective in The Pioneers
  • It could be said that the incidents of this tale
    are purely a fiction, even though the literal
    facts are connected with the natural and
    artificial objects and the customs of the
    inhabitants.
  • The academy, and court-house, and jail, and inn,
    and other things, are exact.
  • Cooper is aware of the numerous faults in the
    story, but he still decides to overlook this fact
    but wrote the story with the intention to please
    himself.

14
Responses to The Pioneers
  • Cooper's ingenious wasnt expressed in his
    development of American novel, but the ability to
    find audience for it. With The Pioneers, he
    facilitated an American literary awakening from
    imitations of imported novels to a true
    literature. "Quite simply, Cooper created a
    community of readers whose taste dominate the
    market for fiction in America, .in the 19th
    century (Sydney Smiths The Edinburgh Review)

15
What Cooper Says About The Pioneers
  • "Our political institutions, the state of
    learning among us, and the influence of religion
    upon the national character, have been often
    discussed and displayed but our domestic
    manners, the social and the moral influences,
    which operate in retirement, and in common
    intercourse, and the multitude of local
    peculiarities, which form our distinctive
    features upon the many peopled earth, have very
    seldom been happily exhibited in our literature"

16
The Limitation of Coopers Work
  • The weaknesses of Cooper is obvious, which is his
    female characters, since they lack variety, and
    are generally sappy and flat.
  • All his fictional works reflect the didactic
    concern to educate about democracy in a
    oppressively schoolmasterish method, but his
    characters are often richly developed, and
    recognized as a remarkable gallery of American
    types, with richness, depth, and complexity
    unsurpassed in American fiction before Hawthorne
    and Melville.

17
Photo Gallery
  • Top James Fenimore Cooper
  • Middle Natty Bumppos Cave
  • Bottom Lake Otsego Scenery
  • Photo Credits http//www.ub-unibielefield.de/digl
    ib/KarlMay/cooper/

18
Discussion Questions (1)
  • Several scenes in The Pioneers reflect
    specifically Cooper's portrayal of Natty
    Bumppo as a American frontiersman. Name some of
    them in Chapter 3.
  • Natty is portrayed as the literary bridge between
    the "old world" and the dawning of American
    possibility. His interactions in the woods and in
    civilization make him a vestige of the natural
    man that Cooper admires, trapped in the changing
    world that Cooper bemoans. Is there a similar
    situation we face in the present as readers?

19
Discussion Questions (2)
  • The story of Natty Bumppo is linked to Natty
    Bumppo the Indian, representing him with two
    identities. In Taiwan, could it be possible that
    our indigenous people today also face the same
    conflict?
  • Cooper mentioned that "In point of civilization,
    comforts, and character, the Indians, who remain
    near the coasts, are about on a level with the
    lowest classes of European peasantry. Perhaps
    they are somewhat below the English, but I think
    . . . they are much below the condition of the
    mass of the slaves. How does this view
    affect Coopers portrayal of the story?

20
Landscape in The Pioneers
  • In this novel, Cooper debates the complexity of
    landscape within a new American frontier.
  • Nature replaces history within American culture
    and Cooper evaluates his landscape as one that
    will be established by a civilization unable to
    escape its own traits of wastefulness and
    arrogance.

21
Landscape in The Pioneers (2)
  • Cooper foreshadows the settlers' inability to
    conceive the power, life, and autonomy of nature
    because they feel it cannot truly exist without
    their influence.
  • In Chapter III, Natty Bumppo emerges as the
    antithesis of the wastefulness demonstrated by
    the settlers. He struggles to understand how
    abusive the Sheriff and Billy Kirby are when they
    slaughter pigeons just for sport.

22
Otsego in The Pioneers
  • Otsego was included in a county of Albany, and
    then became a part of Montgomery after the war
    was finally set apart as a county after 1783,
    which lies among Alleghanies, covering the
    midland counties of New York.
  • Otsego is said to be a word compounded of Ot, a
    place of meeting, and Sego, or Sago, the term of
    salutation used by the Indians of this region.

23
Otsego in The Pioneers (2)
  • There is a tradition that says the neighboring
    tribes were accustomed to meet on the banks of
    the lake to make treaties, to strengthen
    alliances, and which refers the name to this
    practice.
  • In 1779 an expedition was sent against the
    hostile Indians, who dwelt about a hundred miles
    west of Otsego, with the troops proceeded to the
    other extremity of the lake, where they
    disembarked and encamped.

24
References
  • James Fenimore Cooper Biography
    http//www2.bc.edu/wallacej/jfc/jfcbio.html
  • Fenimore's Natty Bumppo http//xroads.virginia.edu
    /UG02/COOPER/bumppo.html
  • Landscape in The Pioneers http//xroads.virginia.e
    du/UG02/COOPER/landscape.html
  • The Pioneers--Cooper's Introduction to the Novel
    http//xroads.virginia.edu/UG02/COOPER/chapters.h
    tml
  • Critical and Popular Response http//xroads.virgin
    ia.edu/UG02/COOPER/response.html
  • Natty as Indian http//xroads.virginia.edu/UG02/
    COOPER/indian.html
  • Natty as Frontiersman http//xroads.virginia.edu/
    UG02/COOPER/frontiersman.html
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