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The essays illuminate Clemens's connections with people and events not usually given the spotlight and introduce us to Clemens as a man deeply embroiled in the process of making literary gold out of everyday experiences. From Clemens's wonderings on race and identity to his looking to family and domesticity as defining experiences, from musings on the language that Clemens used so effectively to consideration of the images and processes of composition, these essays challenge long-held notions of why Clemens was so successful and so influential a writer. While that search itself is not new, the varied approaches within this collection highlight markedly inventive ways of reading the life and work of Samuel Clemens.
About the EditorsLaura E. Skandera Trombley is Vice President for Academic Affairs at Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. She is the author of numerous books, including Mark Twain in the Company of Women. Michael J. Kiskis is Professor of American Literature at Elmira College in New York. He is the editor of Mark Twain's Own Autobiography: The Chapters from the "North American Review."
ContentsIntroduction, by Michael J. Kiskis and Laura E. Skandera TrombleyMark Twain and the Tradition of Literary Domesticity, by Michael J. Kiskis Samuel Clemens as Family Man, by Victor A. Doyno "To his preferred friends he revealed his true character": Mary Mason Fairbanks' Disguised Debate with Sam Clemens, by J. D. Stahl It Isn't the Writer that Does the Work: Mark Twain's Mechanical Marvels, by Jeffrey Steinbrink Steamboats, Cocaine, and Paper Money: Mark Twain Rewriting Himself, by Robert Sattelmeyer Mark Twain, Isabel Lyon, and the "Talking Cure": Negotiating Nostalgia and Nihilism in the Autobiography, by Jennifer L. Zaccara The Minstrel and the Detective: The Functions of Ethnic Caricature in Mark Twain's Writings of the 1890s, by Henry B. Wonham Huck, Jim, and the "Black & White" Fallacy, by James S. Leonard Humor, Sentimentality, and Mark Twain's Black Characters, by David L. Smith Black Genes and White Lies: Twain and the Romance of Race, by Ann M. Ryan Mark Twain in Large and Small: The Infinite and the Infinitesimal in Twain's Late Writing, by Tom Quirk Mark Twain Studies and the Myth of Metaphor, by John Bird "Who Killed Mark Twain?" Long Live Samuel Clemens! by Laura E. Skandera Trombley and Gary Scharnhorst |
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