The Neutral Ground
The Andre Affair and the Background of Cooper's The Spy
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:30th Oct '94
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Examining Cooper's second novel, The Spy, in new and startling ways, Rosenberg finds that it is the first popular spy novel, making Cooper the father of this genre as well as the Western.
John Andre was captured in September 1780, outside British lines, and was hanged as a spy. The publication date of The Spy (1821--the year of Andre's reinterment) further suggests that this affair is really the impetus for Cooper's examination of the nature of spying.
John Andre was captured in September 1780, outside British lines, and was hanged as a spy. Forty years later, he was still so highly regarded that, in 1821, his body was exhumed and reburied in the Heroes' Corner of Westminster Abbey. This book argues that James Fenimore Cooper's second novel, The Spy, is an examination of the nature and character of clandestinity in which the author investigates the morality of deceit and disguised intentions in normal life as well as in wartime by using the Andre affair as background. A century later, The Spy was undiscovered by British spy novelists. The publication date of The Spy (1821--the year of Andre's reinterment) further suggests that this affair is really the impetus for Cooper's examination of the nature of spying. Cooper is usually acknowledged as the originator of the Western; one of the assertions of this book is that he is also the first spy novelISBN: 9780313293191
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 340g
168 pages