After returning from his European travels in the 1830s, Cooper was persuaded by his niece's husband, Horace H. Comstock, to invest in Michigan real estate. The Potawatomi had ceded much of their land in central Michigan by 1833 and their former territory became known as "oak-openings". By 1837, Cooper's $6,000 investment was losing value, though he watched as his fellow New Yorkers attempted to colonize the area like honeybees.[4] The experience inspired The Oak Openings; or, The Bee Hunter, and the novel became one of the first representations of beekeeping in American literature.[5] Though not the first author to use the term "oak openings", Frederick Marryat did so, Cooper popularized the term for the type of oak clad Savannah with the publication of the novel.[6]
The novel is Cooper's last "wilderness novel" following his Leatherstocking Tales and serves as a melancholy follow-up to that series.[7] It is also the last of his novels to explore the relationships between Europeans and Native Americans in the early American expansion.[8][9]
Analysis
The novel has a significant religious thematic focus.[10]
The novel explores assumptions about individual and Native American ownership of property, a continuation of issues that some of Cooper's other works deal with, as in the tract The American Democrat.[5]
The main character, Benjamin Boden, is compared symbolically to the bees which he tends through nicknames like "Buzzing Ben" and the French term le Bourdon ("the drone"), which shows him as an industrious laborer.[11]
^Goff, Lisa (2016). Shantytown, USA: Forgotten Landscapes of the Working Poor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 42. ISBN978-0-674-66045-8.
^Ziser, Michael (2013). Environmental Practice and Early American Literature. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 121–122. ISBN978-1-107-00543-3.
^Goff, Lisa (2016). Shantytown, USA: Forgotten Landscapes of the Working Poor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 41. ISBN978-0-674-66045-8.
^Peprník, Michal (2005). Cooper's Indians: Typology and Function(PDF). Proceedings from the Eighth Conference of British, American and Canadian Studies. Theory and Practice in English Studies. Vol. 4. Brno: Masarykova univerzita. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2015-09-02.
^Frederick, John T. (December 1956). "Cooper's Eloquent Indians". PMLA. 71 (5): 1004–1017. doi:10.2307/460524. JSTOR460524.
^Walker, Warren S. (1978). "The Oak Openings; or, The Bee-Hunter (1848) plot summary". Plots and Characters in the Fiction of James Fenimore Cooper. Hamden, CT: Archon Books. pp. 133–140. Archived from the original on 2015-06-17. Retrieved 2015-09-02 – via James Fenimore Cooper Society.
^Goff, Lisa (2016). Shantytown, USA: Forgotten Landscapes of the Working Poor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 43. ISBN978-0-674-66045-8.
Further reading
Flory, Claude Reherd (1936). Economic Criticism in American Fiction, 1792-1900 (Thesis). University of Pennsylvania.
Madison, Robert D. (May 2013). Cooper's Oak-Openings: A Christian Novel. Cooper Panel of the 2013 Conference of the American Literature Association. Boston, Massachusetts. pp. 10–12 – via James Fenimore Cooper Society Miscellaneous Papers.