The Canoe and the Saddle
A Critical Edition
Critical edition
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Author
Contributions
- Paul J. Lindholdt (Editor) - Contributor
Publication
2006-11-01 - Bison Books
Language
English
Word Count
60,000 words, Guess
Page Count
240 pages
Physical Format
Paperback
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL7906416M
- ISBN-139780803298637
- ISBN-100803298633
- OCLC Control Number63122795
- OCLC Control Numbercanoesaddlecriti00wint
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number2006001529
- LibraryThing1090538
- Goodreads3308059
Classifications
- LCCF891.W79 2006
Description
**From Amazon.com:** In 1853, with money in his pocket and elegant clothes in his saddlebags, a twenty-four-year-old New Englander of aristocratic Yankee stock toured the territories of California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia. The Canoe and the Saddle recounts Theodore Winthrop’s Northwest tour. A novelized memoir of his travels, it became a bestseller when it was published shortly after the author’s untimely death in the Civil War. This critical edition of Winthrop’s work, the first in over half a century, offers readers the original text with a narrative overview of the nature and culture of the Pacific Northwest and reflections on the ecological and racial turmoil that gripped the region at the time. It also provides a fresh perspective on the aesthetic, historical, cultural, anthropological, social, and environmental contexts in which Winthrop wrote his sometimes disturbing, sometimes enlightening, and always riveting account. Whether offering portraits of Native American culture—in particular, commenting on the Chinook Jargon—making keen and often prescient observations on nature, or deploying transcendental, animist, or Hudson River School aesthetics (likely learned from his friend Frederick Church), Winthrop develops a clear and compelling picture of a time and place still resonant and relevant today.
Subjects
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Other Editions
- The Canoe and the Saddle: A Critical Edition
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