{"title":"詹姆斯-菲尼摩尔-库珀小说的教学方法》,斯蒂芬-卡尔-阿奇和基特-默里编(评论)","authors":"Theresa Strouth Gaul","doi":"10.1353/eal.2024.a918918","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper</em> ed. by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Theresa Strouth Gaul (bio) </li> </ul> <em>Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper</em><br/> <small>edited by</small> <small>stephen carl arch</small> and <small>keat murray</small><br/> Modern Language Association of America, 2022<br/> 220 pp. <p>Teaching James Fenimore Cooper's novels in an undergraduate classroom today is daunting, and we know the reasons why: convoluted plots, unfamiliar historical contexts, archaic and circuitous language, lengthy narratives, and racial and gender politics ranging from ambiguous to problematic to offensive from our current point of view. The contributors to <em>Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper</em>, edited by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray, are realistic about the challenges of teaching Cooper but remain undaunted. Together, they seek \"to empower students to engage the ideas\" at the center of his novels while demonstrating Cooper's relevance today in a number of contemporary debates, including \"the nature of democracy, the rights of marginalized peoples, and our relation to the natural world\" (1).</p> <p>The volume primarily targets instructors of upper-level courses for English majors, though a few essays address approaches suitable for graduate courses (Rochelle Raineri Zuck), general education offerings (Elaina Anne Frulla and David W. Hartwig), or international students (Anna Scannavini). An online survey of instructors who frequently teach Cooper's novels helped the editors determine an array of resources with which to open the book. These extremely helpful materials include an introduction outlining the ups and downs of Cooper's career and reception, a comprehensive and chronological list of Cooper's publications, a literature review of selected significant critical readings, commentary on the appropriateness for teaching of available editions, and a list of all the film adaptations of Cooper's works accompanied by overviews of the most significant ones. The editors <strong>[End Page 179]</strong> organized essays into sections on history and culture, the environment, language and form, and visuality and cinema. Altogether, essays in the book provide approaches to teaching eleven of Cooper's novels: the Leather-stocking Tales (1823–41), <em>The Crater</em> (1847), <em>The Pilot</em> (1824), <em>Lionel Lincoln</em> (1825), <em>Satanstoe</em> (1845), <em>The Spy</em> (1821), <em>The Ways of the Hour</em> (1850), and <em>Wyandotté</em> (1843). As one might expect, <em>The Last of the Mohicans</em> (1826) receives the most attention as the focus of six of the seventeen essays.</p> <p>The most exciting essays in the book are those that offer fresh approaches to teaching Cooper. Standouts in this regard are Murray's essay explaining how to support students in applying an animal studies approach to <em>The Pioneers</em> and Matthew Wynn Sivil's foregrounding of the \"American apocalyptic tradition\" in teaching <em>The Crater</em> by focusing on \"the human experience of environmental degradation\" (93). Barbara Mann creatively examines Cooper's contributions to the genre of detective fiction in <em>The Ways of the Hour</em>, and Christopher J. Lukasik considers how students' own engagement with media and visual imagery can act as a lever to consider Cooper's positioning at a key moment in media history when visual images began to proliferate and circulate in new ways.</p> <p>As one might expect and hope, most of the essays grapple to one degree or another with the important task of introducing students to the historical contexts within which Cooper wrote and to which he responded, including race relations (Sarah Sillin), ethnocentrism (Donna Richardson), multiculturalism (Robert Daly), and westward expansion (Michael Demson). Given this sustained focus across the volume, it is noticeable that few essays center Indigenous voices, authors, or scholarship in their efforts to complicate and elucidate Cooper's works. Betty Booth Donahue (Cherokee Nation) presents a \"Native interpretation\" of <em>The Pioneers</em> to compellingly model how one could demonstrate to students \"an American Indian literary influence\" in Cooper's works and engage them with Native cultures more broadly. Zuck points to three Indigenous-authored texts as she lays out her method to have students reconstruct debates about sovereignty and Indigenous land rights, and Paul Gutjahr explores the politics of casting Russell Means in Michael Mann's film adaptation of <em>The Last of the Mohicans</em> (1992). But beyond this, there is remarkably little visible influence of cutting-edge insights emerging from the field of Native American...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":0,"journal":{"name":"","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2024-02-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper ed. by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray (review)\",\"authors\":\"Theresa Strouth Gaul\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/eal.2024.a918918\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper</em> ed. by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Theresa Strouth Gaul (bio) </li> </ul> <em>Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper</em><br/> <small>edited by</small> <small>stephen carl arch</small> and <small>keat murray</small><br/> Modern Language Association of America, 2022<br/> 220 pp. <p>Teaching James Fenimore Cooper's novels in an undergraduate classroom today is daunting, and we know the reasons why: convoluted plots, unfamiliar historical contexts, archaic and circuitous language, lengthy narratives, and racial and gender politics ranging from ambiguous to problematic to offensive from our current point of view. The contributors to <em>Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper</em>, edited by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray, are realistic about the challenges of teaching Cooper but remain undaunted. Together, they seek \\\"to empower students to engage the ideas\\\" at the center of his novels while demonstrating Cooper's relevance today in a number of contemporary debates, including \\\"the nature of democracy, the rights of marginalized peoples, and our relation to the natural world\\\" (1).</p> <p>The volume primarily targets instructors of upper-level courses for English majors, though a few essays address approaches suitable for graduate courses (Rochelle Raineri Zuck), general education offerings (Elaina Anne Frulla and David W. Hartwig), or international students (Anna Scannavini). An online survey of instructors who frequently teach Cooper's novels helped the editors determine an array of resources with which to open the book. These extremely helpful materials include an introduction outlining the ups and downs of Cooper's career and reception, a comprehensive and chronological list of Cooper's publications, a literature review of selected significant critical readings, commentary on the appropriateness for teaching of available editions, and a list of all the film adaptations of Cooper's works accompanied by overviews of the most significant ones. The editors <strong>[End Page 179]</strong> organized essays into sections on history and culture, the environment, language and form, and visuality and cinema. Altogether, essays in the book provide approaches to teaching eleven of Cooper's novels: the Leather-stocking Tales (1823–41), <em>The Crater</em> (1847), <em>The Pilot</em> (1824), <em>Lionel Lincoln</em> (1825), <em>Satanstoe</em> (1845), <em>The Spy</em> (1821), <em>The Ways of the Hour</em> (1850), and <em>Wyandotté</em> (1843). As one might expect, <em>The Last of the Mohicans</em> (1826) receives the most attention as the focus of six of the seventeen essays.</p> <p>The most exciting essays in the book are those that offer fresh approaches to teaching Cooper. Standouts in this regard are Murray's essay explaining how to support students in applying an animal studies approach to <em>The Pioneers</em> and Matthew Wynn Sivil's foregrounding of the \\\"American apocalyptic tradition\\\" in teaching <em>The Crater</em> by focusing on \\\"the human experience of environmental degradation\\\" (93). Barbara Mann creatively examines Cooper's contributions to the genre of detective fiction in <em>The Ways of the Hour</em>, and Christopher J. Lukasik considers how students' own engagement with media and visual imagery can act as a lever to consider Cooper's positioning at a key moment in media history when visual images began to proliferate and circulate in new ways.</p> <p>As one might expect and hope, most of the essays grapple to one degree or another with the important task of introducing students to the historical contexts within which Cooper wrote and to which he responded, including race relations (Sarah Sillin), ethnocentrism (Donna Richardson), multiculturalism (Robert Daly), and westward expansion (Michael Demson). Given this sustained focus across the volume, it is noticeable that few essays center Indigenous voices, authors, or scholarship in their efforts to complicate and elucidate Cooper's works. Betty Booth Donahue (Cherokee Nation) presents a \\\"Native interpretation\\\" of <em>The Pioneers</em> to compellingly model how one could demonstrate to students \\\"an American Indian literary influence\\\" in Cooper's works and engage them with Native cultures more broadly. Zuck points to three Indigenous-authored texts as she lays out her method to have students reconstruct debates about sovereignty and Indigenous land rights, and Paul Gutjahr explores the politics of casting Russell Means in Michael Mann's film adaptation of <em>The Last of the Mohicans</em> (1992). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 詹姆斯-菲尼莫尔-库珀小说的教学方法》,斯蒂芬-卡尔-阿奇和基特-默里编 特蕾莎-斯特劳斯-高尔(简历) 《詹姆斯-菲尼莫尔-库珀小说的教学方法》,斯蒂芬-卡尔-阿奇和基特-默里编 美国现代语言协会,2022 年 220 页。今天,在本科生课堂上教授詹姆斯-菲尼莫尔-库珀的小说是一件令人生畏的事情,我们知道其中的原因:迂回曲折的情节、陌生的历史背景、陈旧迂回的语言、冗长的叙事,以及种族和性别政治,从模棱两可到问题重重,再到从我们当前的观点来看令人反感。由斯蒂芬-卡尔-阿奇和基特-默里主编的《詹姆斯-菲尼莫尔-库珀小说教学法》一书的撰稿人对库珀教学所面临的挑战持现实态度,但仍不畏艰难。他们共同寻求 "让学生有能力参与到 "库珀小说的中心思想中,同时展示库珀在当代一系列辩论中的现实意义,包括 "民主的本质、边缘化人群的权利以及我们与自然世界的关系"(1)。该书主要针对英语专业高年级课程的教师,但也有几篇文章论述了适合研究生课程(Rochelle Raineri Zuck)、通识教育课程(Elaina Anne Frulla 和 David W. Hartwig)或国际学生(Anna Scannavini)的教学方法。通过对经常讲授库珀小说的教师进行在线调查,编辑们确定了本书的一系列资源。这些非常有用的资料包括:概述库珀职业生涯起伏和接受情况的导言、库珀按时间顺序排列的出版物综合清单、精选重要评论读物的文献综述、关于现有版本是否适合教学的评论,以及库珀作品所有改编电影的清单,并附有对最重要改编电影的概述。编者 [尾页 179]将文章分为历史与文化、环境、语言与形式、视觉性与电影等部分。书中的文章为库珀的十一部小说提供了教学方法:《皮袜故事》(1823-41)、《陨石坑》(1847)、《领航员》(1824)、《莱昂内尔-林肯》(1825)、《撒旦斯托》(1845)、《间谍》(1821)、《时间的方式》(1850)和《怀恩多特》(1843)。正如人们所预料的那样,《最后的莫希干人》(1826 年)受到了最多的关注,17 篇文章中有 6 篇以它为中心。书中最精彩的文章是那些为库珀教学提供新方法的文章。其中最突出的是穆雷(Murray)的文章,他解释了如何帮助学生将动物研究方法应用到《先驱者》中,以及马修-怀恩-西维尔(Matthew Wynn Sivil)在《陨石坑》的教学中通过关注 "人类对环境恶化的体验"(93)来突出 "美国世界末日传统"。芭芭拉-曼(Barbara Mann)创造性地研究了库珀在《时间的方式》中对侦探小说体裁的贡献,克里斯托弗-J-卢卡西克(Christopher J. Lukasik)则考虑了学生自身对媒体和视觉图像的参与如何能够成为一种杠杆,以考虑库珀在媒体史上视觉图像开始以新的方式扩散和流通的关键时刻的定位。正如人们所期待和希望的那样,大多数文章都或多或少地涉及了一项重要任务,即向学生介绍库珀写作的历史背景以及他所回应的历史背景,包括种族关系(萨拉-西林)、种族中心主义(唐娜-理查森)、多元文化主义(罗伯特-戴利)和西进扩张(迈克尔-德姆森)。考虑到整本书的持续关注点,值得注意的是,很少有文章以原住民的声音、作者或学术研究为中心,努力将库珀的作品复杂化并加以阐释。贝蒂-布斯-多纳休(切诺基部落)对《先驱者》进行了 "原住民解读",令人信服地示范了如何向学生展示库珀作品中 "美国印第安文学的影响",并让他们更广泛地接触原住民文化。祖克(Zuck)在阐述她让学生重构有关主权和土著土地权利辩论的方法时,指出了三部土著人撰写的文本,保罗-古特亚尔(Paul Gutjahr)则探讨了迈克尔-曼(Michael Mann)改编自《最后的莫希干人》(1992 年)的电影中罗素-米恩斯(Russell Means)的政治角色。但除此之外,美国原住民领域的前沿见解对该书的影响非常有限。
Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper ed. by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper ed. by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray
Theresa Strouth Gaul (bio)
Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper edited by stephen carl arch and keat murray Modern Language Association of America, 2022 220 pp.
Teaching James Fenimore Cooper's novels in an undergraduate classroom today is daunting, and we know the reasons why: convoluted plots, unfamiliar historical contexts, archaic and circuitous language, lengthy narratives, and racial and gender politics ranging from ambiguous to problematic to offensive from our current point of view. The contributors to Approaches to Teaching the Novels of James Fenimore Cooper, edited by Stephen Carl Arch and Keat Murray, are realistic about the challenges of teaching Cooper but remain undaunted. Together, they seek "to empower students to engage the ideas" at the center of his novels while demonstrating Cooper's relevance today in a number of contemporary debates, including "the nature of democracy, the rights of marginalized peoples, and our relation to the natural world" (1).
The volume primarily targets instructors of upper-level courses for English majors, though a few essays address approaches suitable for graduate courses (Rochelle Raineri Zuck), general education offerings (Elaina Anne Frulla and David W. Hartwig), or international students (Anna Scannavini). An online survey of instructors who frequently teach Cooper's novels helped the editors determine an array of resources with which to open the book. These extremely helpful materials include an introduction outlining the ups and downs of Cooper's career and reception, a comprehensive and chronological list of Cooper's publications, a literature review of selected significant critical readings, commentary on the appropriateness for teaching of available editions, and a list of all the film adaptations of Cooper's works accompanied by overviews of the most significant ones. The editors [End Page 179] organized essays into sections on history and culture, the environment, language and form, and visuality and cinema. Altogether, essays in the book provide approaches to teaching eleven of Cooper's novels: the Leather-stocking Tales (1823–41), The Crater (1847), The Pilot (1824), Lionel Lincoln (1825), Satanstoe (1845), The Spy (1821), The Ways of the Hour (1850), and Wyandotté (1843). As one might expect, The Last of the Mohicans (1826) receives the most attention as the focus of six of the seventeen essays.
The most exciting essays in the book are those that offer fresh approaches to teaching Cooper. Standouts in this regard are Murray's essay explaining how to support students in applying an animal studies approach to The Pioneers and Matthew Wynn Sivil's foregrounding of the "American apocalyptic tradition" in teaching The Crater by focusing on "the human experience of environmental degradation" (93). Barbara Mann creatively examines Cooper's contributions to the genre of detective fiction in The Ways of the Hour, and Christopher J. Lukasik considers how students' own engagement with media and visual imagery can act as a lever to consider Cooper's positioning at a key moment in media history when visual images began to proliferate and circulate in new ways.
As one might expect and hope, most of the essays grapple to one degree or another with the important task of introducing students to the historical contexts within which Cooper wrote and to which he responded, including race relations (Sarah Sillin), ethnocentrism (Donna Richardson), multiculturalism (Robert Daly), and westward expansion (Michael Demson). Given this sustained focus across the volume, it is noticeable that few essays center Indigenous voices, authors, or scholarship in their efforts to complicate and elucidate Cooper's works. Betty Booth Donahue (Cherokee Nation) presents a "Native interpretation" of The Pioneers to compellingly model how one could demonstrate to students "an American Indian literary influence" in Cooper's works and engage them with Native cultures more broadly. Zuck points to three Indigenous-authored texts as she lays out her method to have students reconstruct debates about sovereignty and Indigenous land rights, and Paul Gutjahr explores the politics of casting Russell Means in Michael Mann's film adaptation of The Last of the Mohicans (1992). But beyond this, there is remarkably little visible influence of cutting-edge insights emerging from the field of Native American...