The Last Frontier
Native American Literature
Discussion Questions for The Last Frontier
National Endowment for the Humanities Seminar
Saddleback College
Summer 1997
Robert Cosgrove, PhD
Liberal Arts
Saddleback College
The Last Frontier
Discussion Questions
Howard Fast's The Last Frontier looks at a reservation
tribe that revolts because of mistreatment by reservation agents
who shortchange them on rations and who ignore them as human.
The novel, written in the 1940s, is wholly sympathetic to the small
band of Indians who elect to flee horrifying conditions to return
north to their original homeland or, if pressed, go into Canada
where they believe they might be free from bondage. During the
course of their flight, some 10,000 federal troops take up the hunt
for them.
The audience for this novel is a European-oriented one. Fast
attempts to portray the Indians as the heroes, the downtrodden, the
oppressed. Still, readers see through the eyes of a white culture
rather than a red one. First, as an avenue for discussion, and,
later, as a writing project, students can examine the motive(s)
behind Fast's writing of this story (beyond its literary and
artistic merits). Some discussion and pre-writing questions for
them to raise initially:
- Does Fast continue his interest in the socialistic point of
view so often seen in his other novels?
- Does Fast seem to want to take to task (a bit like earlier
muckrakers) white authority?
- Does Fast perhaps merely want to right a wrong by taking a
historical incident and dramatizing it for whites to see the harm
done to the original Americans?
- How might the white story teller differ from a red story
teller?
- What other motive or combination of motives might be
entertained after reading the novel and then discussing it with
other critical readers?
Sources/References:
- Fast, Howard. Being Red: A Memoir. Houghton Mifflin,
1990.
- Fast, Howard. Freedom Road (American History Through
Literature). M.E. Sharpe, 1995.
- Fast, Howard. The Last Frontier. M.E. Sharpe, 1997.
- MacDonald, Andrew. Howard Fast: A Critical Companion
(Critical Companions to Popular Contemporary Writers).
Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996.
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