9780404644833-040464483X-The Cooper Connection the Influence of Jane Austen on James Fenimore Cooper: A Critical Narrative Survey of Scholarship on Charles Dickens 2010 (Ams Studies in the Nineteenth Century)

The Cooper Connection the Influence of Jane Austen on James Fenimore Cooper: A Critical Narrative Survey of Scholarship on Charles Dickens 2010 (Ams Studies in the Nineteenth Century)

ISBN-13: 9780404644833
ISBN-10: 040464483X
Author: Barbara Alice Mann
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Ams Pr Inc
Format: Hardcover 277 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780404644833
ISBN-10: 040464483X
Author: Barbara Alice Mann
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Ams Pr Inc
Format: Hardcover 277 pages

Summary

The Cooper Connection the Influence of Jane Austen on James Fenimore Cooper: A Critical Narrative Survey of Scholarship on Charles Dickens 2010 (Ams Studies in the Nineteenth Century) (ISBN-13: 9780404644833 and ISBN-10: 040464483X), written by authors Barbara Alice Mann, was published by Ams Pr Inc in 2014. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent The Cooper Connection the Influence of Jane Austen on James Fenimore Cooper: A Critical Narrative Survey of Scholarship on Charles Dickens 2010 (Ams Studies in the Nineteenth Century) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.56.

Description

One of the first things that budding scholars of James Fenimore Cooper learn is that he owed a literary debt to Jane Austen. It was Austen, for example, who provided the inspiration for Cooper's first novel, Precaution (1820), and it was her complex windings into subliminal paradigms he caught and later followed, as his own skills improved. Yet despite this well-known connection, Victorian distaste for Austen and Cooper consigned both of them to the critical dustbin, obscuring their many connections. Later scholars then ignored the nexus, satisfying themselves with brief allusions to Cooper's debt to Austen without fully examining their linkages. With The Cooper Connection , Barbara Alice Mann finally gives the many overlapping interests, attitudes, and themes of these two authors the detailed study they deserve. Both highly principled themselves, neither author could countenance bores, sycophants, or fools for God or state. They skewered pretense, self-importance, and hypocrisy while highlighting the strength of female pairings, especially sisterhoods. Cooper and Austen alike packed their plots with sexual allusion and delighted in placing their heroines in delicate and even suggestive situations, a tack that earned them the unremitting contempt of Mark Twain. The broadest and yet, remarkably, least discussed mutuality in Austen and Cooper clustered about the blurring of the nineteenth-century color line. More gingerly than Cooper, Austen considered the social implications of slavery, but both addressed the impact of racial slippage in the decidedly racist project of empire-building in the nineteenth century.
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