The English sportsman in the western prairies
Author: George Charles Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley (hon.)
Publisher:
Published: 1861
Total Pages: 570
ISBN-13:
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Author: George Charles Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley (hon.)
Publisher:
Published: 1861
Total Pages: 570
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley
Publisher:
Published: 1861
Total Pages: 492
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"In 1859, the Western United States was still huge, wild, and open. Englishman Grantley Berkeley decided to have a hunt there and so embarked on an adventure very few of his countrymen would ever even contemplate. Enlisting the services of Americans, this plucky Old Countryman got to live out his fantasy of adventure on the high plains. Camping in the open, hunting enormous herds of buffalo, shooting other game and living the life. And he manages to tell the tale with great humor (humour) and keen observation of American social life, habits, and scenery."--Amazon.com.
Author: Peter Pagnamenta
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 2012-06-18
Total Pages: 363
ISBN-13: 0393084140
DOWNLOAD EBOOK“A deeply researched and finely delivered look at what can best be described as a counterintuitive slice of American history.”—Washington Post From the 1830s onward, a succession of well-born Britons headed west to the great American wilderness to find adventure and fulfillment. They brought their dogs, sporting guns, valets, and all the attitudes and prejudices of their class. Prairie Fever explores why the West had such a strong romantic appeal for them at a time when their inherited wealth and passion for sport had no American equivalent. In fascinating and often comic detail, the author shows how the British behaved—and what the fur traders, hunting guides, and ordinary Americans made of them—as they crossed the country to see the Indians, hunt buffalo, and eventually build cattle empires and buy up vast tracts of the West. But as British blue bloods became American landowners, they found themselves attacked and reviled as “land vultures” and accused of attempting a new colonization. In a final denouement, Congress moved against the foreigners and passed a law to stop them from buying land.
Author: Charles Hallock
Publisher:
Published: 1878
Total Pages: 964
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Glasgow (Scotland). Public Libraries. Stirling's Library
Publisher:
Published: 1888
Total Pages: 642
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Greg Gillespie
Publisher: UBC Press
Published: 2011-11-01
Total Pages: 202
ISBN-13: 0774840382
DOWNLOAD EBOOKHunting for Empire offers a fresh cultural history of sport and imperialism. Greg Gillespie integrates critical perspectives from cultural studies, literary criticism, and cultural geography to analyze the themes of authorship, sport, science, and nature. In doing so he produces a unique theoretical lens through which to study nineteenth-century British big-game hunting and exploration narratives from the western interior of Rupert's Land. Sharply written and evocatively illustrated, Hunting for Empire will appeal to students and scholars of culture, sport, geography, and history, and to general readers interested in stories of hunting, empire, and the Canadian wilderness.
Author: Kaori Nagai
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2015-08-25
Total Pages: 253
ISBN-13: 1137376287
DOWNLOAD EBOOKCosmopolitan Animals asks what new possibilities and permutations of cosmopolitanism can emerge by taking seriously our sharing and 'becoming-with' animals. It calls for a fresh awareness that animals are important players in cosmopolitics, and that worldliness is far from being a human monopoly.
Author: Karen R. Jones
Publisher: University Press of Colorado
Published: 2016-01-02
Total Pages: 379
ISBN-13: 1457197545
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Whether fulfilling subsistence needs or featured in stories of grand adventure, hunting loomed large in the material and the imagined landscape of the nineteenth-century West. Epiphany in the Wilderness explores the social, political, economic, and environmental dynamics of hunting on the frontier in three “acts,” using performance as a trail guide and focusing on the production of a “cultural ecology of the chase” in literature, art, photography, and taxidermy.Using the metaphor of the theater, Jones argues that the West was a crucial stage that framed the performance of the American character as an independent, resourceful, resilient, and rugged individual. The leading actor was the all-conquering masculine hunter hero, the sharpshooting man of the wilderness who tamed and claimed the West with each provident step. Women were also a significant part of the story, treading the game trails as plucky adventurers and resilient homesteaders and acting out their exploits in autobiographical accounts and stage shows.Epiphany in the Wilderness informs various academic debates surrounding the frontier period, including the construction of nature as a site of personal challenge, gun culture, gender adaptations and the crafting of the masculine wilderness hero figure, wildlife management and consumption, memorializing and trophy-taking, and the juxtaposition of a closing frontier with an emerging conservation movement."
Author: New Zealand. Parliament. Library
Publisher:
Published: 1897
Total Pages: 546
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Ada B. Nisbet
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2001-06-07
Total Pages: 548
ISBN-13: 0520098110
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis bibliography of more than three thousand entries, often extensively annotated, lists books and pamphlets that illuminate evolving British views on the United States during a period of great change on both sides of the Atlantic. Subjects addressed in various decades include slavery and abolitionism, women's rights, the Civil War, organized labor, economic, cultural, and social behavior, political and religious movements, and the "American" character in general.