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Gleanings in Europe: Switzerland
Contributor(s): Cooper, James Fenimore (Author), Staggs, Kenneth W. (Text by (Art, Photo Books)), Elliott, James P. (Text by (Art, Photo Books))
ISBN: 087395422X     ISBN-13: 9780873954228
Publisher: State University of New York Press
OUR PRICE:   $35.10  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: June 1983
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History
- Biography & Autobiography
Dewey: B
Series: Writings of James Fenimore Cooper
Physical Information: 361 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In the summer of 1828 James Fenimore Cooper, his wife, and their five children set out from Paris for Switzerland, and Cooper wrote that he experienced a glorious anticipation, for a common-place converse with men was about to give place to a sublime communion with Nature.

Sketches of Switzerland, the book which describes this experience and which is republished here for the first time in the United States since its original issue in 1836, was the first of five European travel books written, Cooper said, for my own Countrymen, in which the American novelist gave rapid sketches of what he saw with American eyes, studiously avoiding the drab, factual accounts of ordinary tourists.

His indispensable resources in the composition of Switzerland were his gifts of total recall and his skill in writing prose pictures in the style then known as picturesque. Seeking an immediacy analogous to that of the artist's brush, Cooper captures various elements of picturesque style, especially the incongruity between the sublime, terrifying scenery and the more familiar sights and associations of domestic life.

Even in the creation of verbal pictures, Cooper could not resist expressing his concerns with society and politics; and though his criticism seems harmless enough today--perhaps even salutary--it was disturbing to American readers less secure than Cooper in their confidence in their institutions and society. Partly, at least, for this reason, Cooper's most successful nonfictional experiment in the picturesque mode has never been adequately appreciated.