Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

The Leatherstocking Tales

 The Leatherstocking Tales
type
TVTItem
 The Leatherstocking Tales
label
The Leatherstocking Tales
 The Leatherstocking Tales
page
TheLeatherstockingTales
 The Leatherstocking Tales
comment
The book series by James Fenimore Cooper.One of the first Franchises of modern literature.In chronological order, the books are: The Deerslayer, or The First War-Path: A Tale — 5th published The Last of the Mohicans: A Narrative of 1757 — 2nd published and most famous The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea — 4th published The Pioneers, or The Sources of the Susquehanna: A Descriptive Tale — 1st published (hence the long subtitle) The Prairie: A Tale — 3rd publishedThey're probably most famous these days for codifying the romantic concept of the Native American Frontier, and for their heroic, chivalrous prose being relentlessly mocked by Mark Twain. (Incidentally, the Defenses are here.) Nonetheless, Cooper became the father of the American novel and wrote the first real American adventure stories. He followed the lead of Sir Walter Scott, adapting it to an American environment and democratizing it: where Scott (like Shakespeare) limited his lower-class characters to comic relief roles, Cooper made commoners like Natty Bumppo central characters of the work they appeared in. He also instituted an American archetype, that of the misfit or outsider hero at odds with society. The Leatherstocking Tales (1823-1841) are the ancestors of the Western. During his lifetime Cooper was the first American writer to achieve worldwide renown and commercial success, and also the first one to impress and influence European writers. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe reread The Pioneers before describing a tiger hunt in his Novelle (1826).The Leatherstocking Tales are one of the first literary appearances of the Noble Savage. (Montaigne was the first to apply this trope to the North American Indians, and the trope itself is Older Than Feudalism—Classical Greek writers spoke of the Gauls this way.) Anyway, back then it was a very progressive portrayal of Native Americans, and he was congratulated for presenting Chingachgook and his son Uncas as heroes (as opposed to thieving, cunning, drunken, heathen assholes). Of course, now we see it as just another stereotype—but Cooper was the first to use this in a novel. In many ways, his noble savages exemplify a way that European-descended North Americans made sense of the values dissonance between their society and that of the Native Americans, who from their point of view simultaneously and most irritatingly embodied both extremely repulsive (cruelty, vengefulness etc.) and attractive (hospitality, courage etc.) qualities. A constant theme in the novels is that Indians, while noble and eloquent note Truth in Television; the consensus nature of tribal government required leaders to be great public speakers to attain positions of influence, are doomed to be eclipsed by the technologically superior white man and fade away. Though real life has disproved this belief, Cooper had some justification for it- he lived in New York, a state whose Native American population really did dwindle dramatically during his lifetime.The thing which ties the five books into a series is the recurring archetypal character of Natty Bumppo, the Long Rifle, who also goes by the names of Deerslayer, Hawkeye, Pathfinder, Leatherstocking and The Trapper. In that order. (They're called The Leatherstocking Tales because he was known as Leatherstocking in The Pioneers, the first book.) In four of the five books, he is joined by Chingachgook ("Great Serpent"), and in Last of the Mohicans by Chingachgook's son Uncas, the eponymous Last of the Mohicans, who dies in battle at the end of the novel.In the 19th century a number of Cooper's novels were adapted for the stage. Later the Leatherstocking Tales were adapted several times into films and television series. These include At least seven film versions of The Last of the Mohicans The 1913 American silent film The Deerslayer, shot on the real location on Lake Otsego. Lederstrumpf (Leatherstocking), a two-part German adaptation of The Deerslayer and The Last of the Mohicans starring Bela Lugosi as Chingachgook (1920). Chingachgook, die große Schlange (Chingachgook, the Great Serpent) (1967), an East German adaptation of the former novel. Hawkeye, a 1994 series from Stephen J. Cannell.
 The Leatherstocking Tales
fetched
2023-08-04T01:59:55Z
 The Leatherstocking Tales
parsed
2023-08-04T01:59:56Z
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingComment
Dropped link to EndOfAnEra: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingComment
Dropped link to NamedAfterSomeoneFamous: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingComment
Dropped link to Prequel: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingComment
Dropped link to PrintLongRunners: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingComment
Dropped link to TheWestern: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingUnknown
EndOfAnEra
 The Leatherstocking Tales
processingUnknown
NamedAfterSomeoneFamous
 The Leatherstocking Tales
isPartOf
DBTropes
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_1282bf4f
type
No Celebrities Were Harmed
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_1282bf4f
comment
No Celebrities Were Harmed: As Cooper explained in a letter, Hard-heart (The Prairie) is based on the real-life Pawnee chief Petalasharo, an acquaintance of his.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_1282bf4f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_1282bf4f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_1282bf4f
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_18dd6739
type
Dressing as the Enemy
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_18dd6739
comment
Dressing as the Enemy: A half-comical example occurs in The Last of the Mohicans, where it entails dressing up in the Huron medicine man's bear costume.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_18dd6739
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_18dd6739
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_18dd6739
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_20844061
type
Newer Than They Think
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_20844061
comment
The name "Cora." While not as popular as Wendy or Jessica, it still went on to become a viable name after the novel.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_20844061
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_20844061
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_20844061
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_294ed981
type
Bilingual Bonus
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_294ed981
comment
Bilingual Bonus: The Last of the Mohicans contains quite a bit of Gratuitous French.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_294ed981
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_294ed981
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_294ed981
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_295087bf
type
Non-Indicative Name
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_295087bf
comment
Non-Indicative Name: At least to white Western tastes Chingachgook ("The Great Snake") and Hard-heart, the Pawnee chief from The Prairie, qualify.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_295087bf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_295087bf
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_295087bf
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_2fd7200b
type
Dead Guy Junior
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_2fd7200b
comment
Dead Guy Junior: Captain Duncan Uncas Middleton in The Prairie. He's the grandson of two characters from The Last of the Mohicans.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_2fd7200b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_2fd7200b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_2fd7200b
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_309f770a
type
Mistaken Age
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_309f770a
comment
Mistaken Age: Chingachgook is frequently portrayed as being elderly or middle-aged. In "The Pioneers", which is set in 1793, Chingachgook is stated to be seventy telling us he was born in 1723 and thus since "The Last of the Mohicans" was set in 1757, he was thirty-four at the time. Although this is more likely an example of Writers Cannot Do Math or Cooper changing his mind between "The Pioneers" and "The Last of the Mohicans", in which Chingachgook's son Uncas is already a feared and famed warrior in his own right. With the added complication of "The Deerslayer" — in which Chingachgook has to rescue his betrothed Wah-ta-Wah — being set in 1740-1745. This in turn means that Uncas would have been seventeen at the oldest or twelve at the youngest when he was killed.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_309f770a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_309f770a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_309f770a
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3c111ce6
type
Pistol-Whipping
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3c111ce6
comment
Pistol-Whipping: Natty has a habit of using his rifle as a club once he's fired. Truth in Television given that these things were pretty dang heavy and took a long time to reload.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3c111ce6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3c111ce6
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3c111ce6
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3ebc57ac
type
Going Native
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3ebc57ac
comment
Going Native: Natty clearly feels most at home living among the Mohicans and later the Pawnees than among whites. In the process he even absorbed the Mohicans' hereditary enmity towards the Iroquois-speaking nations including the Hurons.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3ebc57ac
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3ebc57ac
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3ebc57ac
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3fe6a857
type
Public Domain Character
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3fe6a857
comment
Public Domain Character: Tamenund in The Last of the Mohicans is based on the historic Lenni-Lenape chief Tamenend (died ca. 1701), who became a mythical figure as Tammany, the "Patron Saint of America". By now, Natty Bumppo, Chingachgook and others have become part of the public domain themselves.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3fe6a857
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3fe6a857
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_3fe6a857
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4192763e
type
Malaproper
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4192763e
comment
Malaproper: Cooper himself. Mark Twain has a Long List of examples, though literary experts cannot find some of the ones Twain professed to see.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4192763e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4192763e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4192763e
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45157041
type
Even Mooks Have Loved Ones
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45157041
comment
Even Mooks Have Loved Ones: In The Last of the Mohicans, after a battle in which Hawkeye and his companions kill a number of nameless Hurons who for the most part are described without individual traits, the perspective switches to the Hurons and Magua eulogizes them in a speech to the other braves. The reader then learns that the dead have names and that they are and will be mourned by their friends and families, some of whom are also mentioned by name. Later on there is a scene which shows the deep emotional pain felt by the father of another Huron warrior. Because his only son was executed for cowardice and disowned by the tribe, the father is forced to deny he is his son and not to show sorrow over his death, but his pain is so palpable that the tribal elders show some consideration.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45157041
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45157041
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45157041
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45a387bc
type
Light Feminine and Dark Feminine
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45a387bc
comment
Light Feminine and Dark Feminine: Taken almost to parody with Alice (Light Feminine, all the way to golden hair and utter helplessness) and Cora (Dark Feminine, at least as far as her looks and refusal to be anyone's doormat) Munro in "The Last of the Mohicans".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45a387bc
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45a387bc
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_45a387bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_476302df
type
You Are a Credit to Your Race
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_476302df
comment
You Are a Credit to Your Race: Or rather, "I Am a Credit to My Race" — Hawkeye constantly talks about how he, "a man without a cross" of American Indian blood, can nonetheless fight effectively among them. The American Indians mostly ignore the subject...
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_476302df
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_476302df
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_476302df
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4832a3bb
type
Always Chaotic Evil
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4832a3bb
comment
Always Chaotic Evil: The Hurons are universally hostile to Natty and the rest of the heroes. One would expect the Iroquois in this role, but the Hurons were allies of the French, while the Iroquois, while hostile to the English, were mostly neutral in the Anglo-French question until they wiped out the Hurons in about the 1760s. The two cultures were very similar to each other, though; this is more a question of who's pointing a gun at the hero.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4832a3bb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4832a3bb
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_4832a3bb
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_5db7301f
type
Prophetic Names
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_5db7301f
comment
Prophetic Names: David Gamut is a Puritan psalmodist. His first name is that of the Biblical king to whom most Psalms are credited, his last name is a musical term (a complete scale).
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_5db7301f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_5db7301f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_5db7301f
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_71e12a1f
type
A Kind of One
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_71e12a1f
comment
A Kind of One: Hawkeye moves between the societies of the whites and the Native Americans without properly belonging to either, and he lives an autonomous life that makes it impossible for him to have a family. In the final chapter of The Last of the Mohicans he thus identifies with Chingachgook:
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_71e12a1f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_71e12a1f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_71e12a1f
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_723be11b
type
Villain Has a Point
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_723be11b
comment
Villain Has a Point: Magua is the main villain of The Last of the Mohicans, but he is on point in his oration to the Huron elders where he expounds on the sufferings of black slaves and the insatiable greed for land of the whites. However since he wishes to make Cora, who has black ancestry, his wife and treat her like a slave he comes across as hypocritical at that point.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_723be11b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_723be11b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_723be11b
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_76c30df4
type
Will Not Tell a Lie
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_76c30df4
comment
Will Not Tell a Lie: The Deerslayer.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_76c30df4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_76c30df4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_76c30df4
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_776a06eb
type
All Myths Are True
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_776a06eb
comment
All Myths Are True: Versions of this occur. In The Last of the Mohicans one is voiced by the Delaware women at Cora Munro's funeral. In The Prairie the dying Natty Bumppo is more doubtful, but in his discourse to Hard-Heart at least admits the possibility that the Christian God of the white men and the Great Spirit of the Pawnee will in the end be revealed as identical and that Natty and Hard-Heart will meet again in the afterlife.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_776a06eb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_776a06eb
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_776a06eb
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7831c048
type
So Much for Stealth
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7831c048
comment
So Much for Stealth: As famously noted by Mark Twain, almost any character trying to stay concealed will find a dry twig beneath their foot in short order.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7831c048
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7831c048
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7831c048
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_796bffea
type
Mistaken for Racist
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_796bffea
comment
Mistaken for Racist: In The Last of the Mohicans Colonel Munro flies into a rage when Major Heyward asks for his daughter's hand in marriage and it turns out that the one he wants is not Cora (whose mother was part-black), but her younger-half sister Alice (whose mother was white). Heyward has a hard time convincing convincing Munro that he just happens to be attracted to Alice more than to Cora (the novel at that point already has established that he in fact greatly admires Cora for her spirit and inner strength). It did not help that Heyward is English, as the crusty Scotsman Munro sees racism against blacks and people with black ancestry as a very English prejudice.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_796bffea
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_796bffea
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_796bffea
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7f080f98
type
Vague Age
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7f080f98
comment
Vague Age: Uncas has got to be seventeen at the oldest or twelve at the youngest in "The Last of the Mohicans" since "The Deerslayer" is set between 1740-1745. Magua states that he had not seen a white person until he was twenty so the extent of our knowledge is that he is past twenty.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7f080f98
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7f080f98
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7f080f98
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7fbb2a3
type
Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7fbb2a3
comment
Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: It is the tragic paradox of Natty Bumppo and people like him that he helps to bring about the westward advance of a society he himself finds impossible to live in, which leads to the destruction of his hunting grounds and forces him to move further west, where he is once again followed by "civilized society".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7fbb2a3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7fbb2a3
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_7fbb2a3
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_89434320
type
Protagonist-Centered Morality
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_89434320
comment
Protagonist-Centered Morality: The way different tribes and nations are portrayed to a large extent depends on whether they belong to the protagonists or antagonists of the novel in question. Cooper however does not paint the antagonists entirely without sympathetic qualities. And at one point in Last of the Mohicans the narration even chides Hawkeye for being unfair in his judgement regarding Hurons due to his prejudice against them when he denounces one for refusing to meekly let himself be killed.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_89434320
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_89434320
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_89434320
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_8b6e8d7
type
Anachronic Order
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_8b6e8d7
comment
Anachronic Order: The last book published is the first in chronological order, and none of them were published sequentially.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_8b6e8d7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_8b6e8d7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_8b6e8d7
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_90d44f44
type
Karmic Death
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_90d44f44
comment
Karmic Death: In The Deerslayer Tom Hutter tries to make money by raiding a Huron camp for scalps. He ends up dying after being scalped alive by the Hurons.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_90d44f44
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_90d44f44
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_90d44f44
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_950bbfa7
type
Take a Third Option
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_950bbfa7
comment
Take a Third Option: In the 1850 preface to The Last of the Mohicans Cooper admitted that he had made up the name Horican for the lake on which Fort William Henry is situated. Disliking the names given by the Europeans (French: Lac du Saint-Sacrement, British: Lake George) and finding the Indian one a bit of a mouthful (Iroquois: Andia-ta-roc-te), he renamed it after a tribe that once lived nearby.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_950bbfa7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_950bbfa7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_950bbfa7
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_9f7769a2
type
The Gunslinger
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_9f7769a2
comment
The Gunslinger: First ever! And hence rather lacking in some of the more fancy tricks. This might also have something to do with the fact that Natty uses a long rifle (then usually called a Pennsylvania Rifle, later a Kentucky Rifle).
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_9f7769a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_9f7769a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_9f7769a2
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a68421bb
type
Animated Adaptation
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a68421bb
comment
Animated Adaptation: Three of "The Last of the Mohicans" by Hanna-Barbera, Burbank Films Australia and Mondo TV respectively. The last of these three is the only one with a plot that resembles that of the book.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a68421bb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a68421bb
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a68421bb
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a9fd0dff
type
The Captivity Narrative
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a9fd0dff
comment
The Captivity Narrative: Subverted in the case of Alice and Cora being captured in The Last of the Mohicans. In that novel it is actually played straighter with Magua's back story: He was captured by the Mohawks, adopted into their tribe, but eventually returned to the Hurons where he found that his wife had married someone else in the meantime.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a9fd0dff
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a9fd0dff
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_a9fd0dff
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_aabe2fb
type
Deliberate Values Dissonance
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_aabe2fb
comment
Deliberate Values Dissonance: Occurs quite a bit in Cooper's frontier and other historical novels. This is most noticeable in the rather different set of values held by the white and Native American societies side by side and at the same time. In The Deerslayer Natty Bumppo tries to dissuade Tom Hutter and Harry March from raiding a Huron camp to cash in on the bounties offered by the governor for Huron scalps. For him taking the scalps of enemies is okay for Indians (like Chingachgook) because it is part of their culture (or, in his terminology, part of the gifts of their nature), but it is entirely wrong for white Christians to do the same thing because it violates their values or "gifts".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_aabe2fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_aabe2fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_aabe2fb
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b1346878
type
Fate Worse than Death
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b1346878
comment
Fate Worse than Death: Subverted in The Last of the Mohicans. Although according to Anglo-American standards of the time a white woman living with a "Heathen Savage" is considered this, Cora seriously considers acquiescing to becoming Magua's wife if that is what it takes to rescue her father and sister's lives.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b1346878
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b1346878
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b1346878
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b21fe6da
type
Dawn of the Wild West
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b21fe6da
comment
Dawn of the Wild West: Mostly set in the wilderness of northern and western New York during the middle to late 18th century. The Prairie is set in the Midwest, in the new territories acquired through the Louisiana Purchase.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b21fe6da
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b21fe6da
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b21fe6da
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b77808f2
type
"Where Are They Now?" Epilogue
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b77808f2
comment
"Where Are They Now?" Epilogue: A common staple of many of Cooper's novels. Subverted in The Deerslayer, where Hawkeye proves unable to find out Judith's ultimate fate.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b77808f2
featureApplicability
-0.3
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b77808f2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_b77808f2
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcd27e37
type
Improbable Aiming Skills
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcd27e37
comment
Improbable Aiming Skills: Natty/Hawkeye, who can send an eighteenth century bullet right onto two others without fraying the edges of the bullet hole.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcd27e37
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcd27e37
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcd27e37
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcff3e56
type
The Last Title
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcff3e56
comment
The Last Title: The Last of the Mohicans.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcff3e56
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcff3e56
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bcff3e56
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bead8edd
type
Injun Country
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bead8edd
comment
Injun Country: Cooper's works can be seen at the Trope Codifier for Western literature, stressing how well the Native Americans are attuned to life in their environment through their "gifts".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bead8edd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bead8edd
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_bead8edd
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c132c0c5
type
I Have No Son!
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c132c0c5
comment
I Have No Son!: A tragic posthumous variation ("I had no son") occurs in The Last of the Mohicans: Reed-that-bends, a young Huron warrior guilty of cowardice is condemned to be killed and forgotten by the tribe's elders. A short while after the execution, Magua arrives not knowing what occurred, and has the misfortune to mention his name, so suddenly everybody looks at Reed-that-bends' father, which obliges him to publicly disown his own son to uphold the warrior ethos. He manages to go through with this "bitter triumph", but it breaks him.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c132c0c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c132c0c5
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c132c0c5
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c4942576
type
Cunning Linguist
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c4942576
comment
Cunning Linguist: Duncan Hayward is fluent in French, which enables him to fool a French sentry and also gets him the job of negotiating with the Marquis de Montcalm.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c4942576
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c4942576
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c4942576
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c59d9a4b
type
Half-Breed Discrimination
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c59d9a4b
comment
Half-Breed Discrimination: Cora Munro, the daughter of a Scotch colonel and a Creole mother, in The Last of the Mohicans. One of the first interracial romance plots in American literature. Her case is a subversion, as such discrimination is mentioned as existing and referenced by her father, but in the course of the novel Cora inspires love and admiration in pretty much anyone who meets her. And at her funeral the Delaware women see her mixed blood as something that makes her superior to her bland sister Alice. Ironically, the only person to actually display a prejudice against mixed blood is Hawkeye, who gratingly often takes pride in his own pure white blood and the pure Mohican blood of his friends Chingachgook and Uncas.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c59d9a4b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c59d9a4b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_c59d9a4b
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_caa28b82
type
Cloudcuckoolander
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_caa28b82
comment
Cloudcuckoolander: David Gamut, the Puritan psalmodist in The Last of the Mohicans. Mistaking him for insane, the Hurons spare his life and allow him to roam their camp freely.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_caa28b82
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_caa28b82
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_caa28b82
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_da1c8191
type
Writers Cannot Do Math
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_da1c8191
comment
Although this is more likely an example of Writers Cannot Do Math or Cooper changing his mind between "The Pioneers" and "The Last of the Mohicans", in which Chingachgook's son Uncas is already a feared and famed warrior in his own right. With the added complication of "The Deerslayer" — in which Chingachgook has to rescue his betrothed Wah-ta-Wah — being set in 1740-1745. This in turn means that Uncas would have been seventeen at the oldest or twelve at the youngest when he was killed.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_da1c8191
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_da1c8191
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_da1c8191
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db08e2dd
type
Race-Name Basis
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db08e2dd
comment
Race-Name Basis: In The Last of the Mohicans members of different tribes will often address each other by their tribal name even if they know each other's names, e. g. Uncas addresses Magua as "Huron".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db08e2dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db08e2dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db08e2dd
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db99b292
type
Mondegreen Gag
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db99b292
comment
Yengees. The Algonquin word for "English" (possibly via French "Anglais"), aka "Yankees".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db99b292
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db99b292
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_db99b292
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_de7b7cbf
type
Drugs Are Bad
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_de7b7cbf
comment
Drugs Are Bad: That the white men teaching Indians to drink alcohol was not a good thing is demonstrated with Magua's life story in The Last of the Mohicans. Even Chingachgook gets drunk along with the citizens of Templeton during the Christmas celebrations in The Pioneers. (By the way, Cooper most probably was the first one to use "firewater" — the translation of an Algonquian term for whisky — in a work of fiction).
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_de7b7cbf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_de7b7cbf
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_de7b7cbf
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e26f04b4
type
Last of His Kind
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e26f04b4
comment
Last of His Kind: Chingachgook after the death of Uncas. It should be noted that strictly speaking the kind in question is "Mohican warrior and chief", not "Mohican" per se, as Cooper in the foreword to The Last of the Mohicans pointed out remnants of the tribe were still living in New York, dispersed among other tribes, in 1826, i. e. after the death of Chingachgook in The Pioneers.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e26f04b4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e26f04b4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e26f04b4
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e3def52f
type
Egopolis
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e3def52f
comment
Egopolis: The Pioneers is set in Templeton on Lake Otsego, which is lorded over by its founder Marmaduke Temple. It is an expy of the real-world town of Cooperstown, NY, which was founded by the author's father William Cooper.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e3def52f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e3def52f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e3def52f
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e4965307
type
Composite Character
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e4965307
comment
Composite Character: Cooper's Mohicans confound the Mahicans of the Hudson Valley with the Mohegans of eastern Connecticut (both speakers of Algonquin languages), but that was something even the experts of the day did, including one of Cooper's prime sources, the Moravian missionary John Heckewelder, who assembled extensive first-hand knowledge of the Delaware (Lenni-Lenape) nations.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e4965307
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e4965307
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e4965307
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e7db27c7
type
Sympathetic P.O.V.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e7db27c7
comment
Sympathetic P.O.V.: In The Last of the Mohicans this occurs despite the overall Protagonist-Centered Morality. The passages which focus on Magua and the other Hurons make their motives more understandable and show that they have their own tragedies to bear, some of which have nothing to do with the novel's protagonists.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e7db27c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e7db27c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_e7db27c7
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ea24a918
type
Lost in Imitation
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ea24a918
comment
Lost in Imitation: The Last of the Mohicans has been adapted into film so many times that the 1992 film was explicitly based on an earlier 1936 screenplay in the credits, and praised for it — due to avoiding perceived narrative pitfalls of the book. Of course, by making Day-Lewis the romantic lead, the film also conveniently avoided the book's mid-19th century interracial romance subplot, although it added another.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ea24a918
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ea24a918
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ea24a918
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ed46da54
type
Martial Pacifist
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ed46da54
comment
Martial Pacifist: As The Deerhunter relates, Natty Bumppo used to be one, having been received his religious education from the pacifist Moravian Brethren. This completely changed when he first killed a man (a Huron warrior) in self-defense.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ed46da54
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ed46da54
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ed46da54
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f33ff01c
type
Adaptational Context Change
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f33ff01c
comment
Adaptational Context Change: As Colonel Munro from The Last of the Mohicans really existed, it was a Foregone Conclusion that he should die of heart failure before 1757, the year the novel is set in, is out. However, in the novel his death is attributed not to the exhaustions of the campaign, but to his grief over the death of his (fictional) daughter Cora.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f33ff01c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f33ff01c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f33ff01c
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f6624c30
type
Together in Death
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f6624c30
comment
Together in Death: Cora and Uncas in The Last of the Mohicans. The Delaware women at the funeral chant about how they will enjoy life together in the Happy Hunting Grounds.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f6624c30
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f6624c30
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f6624c30
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f7cf9612
type
Neologism
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f7cf9612
comment
Neologism: The name "Cora." While not as popular as Wendy or Jessica, it still went on to become a viable name after the novel. Yengees. The Algonquin word for "English" (possibly via French "Anglais"), aka "Yankees".
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f7cf9612
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f7cf9612
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_f7cf9612
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ff8f3b0
type
NamedWeapon
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ff8f3b0
comment
Named Weapon: Natty Bumppo's long rifle Killdeer.
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ff8f3b0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ff8f3b0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_ff8f3b0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_name
type
ItemName
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_name
comment
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Leatherstocking Tales / int_name
 The Leatherstocking Tales / int_name
itemName
The Leatherstocking Tales

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 TheLastOfTheMohicans
seeAlso
The Leatherstocking Tales
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
American Literature (J To M) / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Catch and Return / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Dawn of the Wild West / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
During the War / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Egopolis / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Injun Country / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Mighty Whitey / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Native American and First Nations Media / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Noble Savage / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
One-Hit Polykill / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Prophetic Names / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Public Domain Character / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Spiritual Adaptation / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
The Last Title / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Uncleanliness Is Next to Ungodliness / int_c56f12bc
 The Leatherstocking Tales
hasFeature
Will Not Tell a Lie / int_c56f12bc