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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*{{Gutenberg|8880}} |
*{{Gutenberg|no=8880|name=Satanstoe}} |
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{{James Fenimore Cooper}} |
{{James Fenimore Cooper}} |
Revision as of 14:19, 19 September 2015
Satanstoe is a 1845 novel by the early American novelist James Fenimore Cooper. The novel is the first of a three novel cycle, followed by The Chainbearer and The Redskins. The novel is a fictional autobiography which explores the 18th century colony of New York. [1]
References
Further reading
- Bier, Jesse (1968). "The Bisection of Cooper: Satanstoe as Prime Example". Texas Studies in Literature and Language: 511–521. JSTOR 40753962.
- Dondore, Dorothy (1940). "The Debt of Two Dyed-in-the-Wool Americans to Mrs. Grant's Memoirs: Cooper's Satanstoe and Paulding's the Dutchman's Fireside". American Literature. 12 (1): 52–58. JSTOR 2920388.
- Lindstrum, June Laurel (1967). A comparison of two novels by James Fenimore Cooper: The Pioneers and Satanstoe. University of La Verne.
- Pickering, James H. (1967). "Satanstoe: Cooper's Debt to William Dunlap". American Literature: 468–477. JSTOR 2923453.
- Slater, Joseph (1951). "The Dutch Treat in Cooper's Satanstoe". American Speech: 153–154.
- Wallace, James D. (1993). James D. Wallace (ed.). "Race and Spiritualism in Satanstoe" (9). The State University of New York College at Oneonta. Oneonta, New York: 112–119.
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ignored (help) - Wallace, James D. (2009). "Cooper and Slavery". Cooper Panel of the 1992 Conference of the American Literature Association in San Diego. Vol. 12.
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suggested) (help) - West, Donna Lou (1971). "The Literary Mythologists, Cooper and Irving: Dutch Heroes in Satanstoe and Knickerbocker's History of New York. And, the Place of Narrative in the Institutions of Dog Trading and Horse Trading". University of Texas at Austin.
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