The Lasting of the Mohicans
History of an American Myth
There are few people for whom the phrase “last of the Mohicans” does not conjure up memories and associations—childhood games, films, TV programs. Yet most who profess acquaintance with Cooper’s title actually have never read his book. The characters—Hawkeye and his Mohican friends Chingachgook and Uncas—owe more to the media than to Cooper’s text for their popularity. But they have become familiar icons identified with the colonizing of the northeastern frontier and with the creation of “America.”
This groundbreaking and entertaining study focuses on the making and the remaking of media versions of Cooper’s popular book. It shows that each new rendering extends to its audience a dynamic image of the American myth.
Yet along with the appeal of frontier adventure, these media adaptations bear the weight of powerful meanings. Each new version addresses these meanings differently and raises questions about wilderness and frontier, about western expansion, about the relationships between men and women, about the association of whites with “Indians.”
Why does this book that everyone knows, but that few have read, continue to be perennially attractive for the media? In answer to this question, this study throws a new light on the idea of frontier and on the meaning of the American Dream.
Martin Barker is Research Professor at Aberystwyth University. He has researched and published widely on topics ranging from comic books, censorship campaigns, arguments over "dangerous media," methods of film analysis, and audiences for films ranging from Judge Dredd and Crash to Being John Malkovich and The Lord of the Rings. He is author of A Haunt of Fears:The Strange History of the British Horror Comics Campaign, published by University Press of Mississippi. Roger Sabin is a journalist and lecturer in cultural and media studies in London, England.