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Bernard DeVoto : The Course of Empire
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Author: Bernard DeVoto
Title: The Course of Empire
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 688
Date: 1998-09-01
ISBN: 0395924987
Publisher: Mariner Books
Weight: 1.45 pounds
Size: 7.87 x 1.69 x 5.67 inches
Edition: Reissue
Amazon prices:
$0.01used
$3.56new
$14.19Amazon
Previous givers: 1 Nicholas McCausland (USA: PA)
Previous moochers: 1 Travis Noack (USA: TX)
Wishlists:
2Will (Australia), Ron Seckinger (USA: VA).
Description: Product Description
Tracing North American Exploration from Balboa to Lewis and Clark, Devoto tells in a classic fashion how the drama of discovery defined the American nation. The Course of Empire is the third volume in historian Bernard Devoto’s monumental trilogy of the West. Entertaining and incisive, this is the dramatic story of three hundred years of exploration of North America leading up to 1805.


Amazon.com Review
Until his death in 1955, critic Bernard DeVoto explored a conception of the American character rooted in the experience of westward expansion. Unlike those who championed the civilizing graces of the agrarian frontier, DeVoto drew inspiration from the mercenary, imperial designs of the fur trade. The Course of Empire, the most elaborate of his chronicles of mountain men and their impact on U.S. history, meticulously accounts for every major Euro-American expedition and enterprise west of the Alleghenies from the 1520s through the 1830s.

In exploiting the West's resources, trappers, priests and explorers had to find new ways of navigating, mapping, and staking territorial claims. Eventually they made alliances amongst some of the native inhabitants and war upon hostiles and interlopers in order to protect their nation's trade routes. This unique political economy, according to DeVoto, ultimately shaped the budding republic's belief that it was destined to rule the continent. By emphasizing how indigenous social and environmental factors effected the protocols of conquest, The Course of Empire foreshadowed cultural studies such as Henry Nash Smith's Virgin Land and Richard Slotkin's trilogy of books on "the myth of the American frontier." Its linkage of geography to the concept of empire also puts it in dialogue with the histories of William Cronon and Donald Worster. In a field marked by rapid conceptual change, DeVoto's analysis has retained its relevance to the present day. --John M. Anderson

URL: http://bookmooch.com/0395924987
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