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BOOK EXCERPT:
Grounding this study in tourist theory, Melton explores how, in five travel books, Twain captures the birth and growth of a new creature who would go on to change the map of the world: the American tourist."--BOOK JACKET.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Business & Economics |
Author |
: Jeffrey Alan Melton |
Publisher |
: University of Alabama Press |
Release |
: 2002-06-26 |
File |
: 220 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780817311605 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
This critical study analyzes major concepts in the travel literature of Mark Twain and notes how his oeuvre (including his classic works of fiction) revolves around travel as a central issue. The book focuses especially on his representations of time, place, and identity in the travel works Roughing It, A Tramp Abroad, The Innocents Abroad, Life on The Mississippi, and Following the Equator. All receive an in-depth analysis, noting Twain's strong sense of nostalgia for the disappearing American frontier, his growing concern over the assimilation of Native American cultures, and his continual search for a sense of personal and national identity. One appendix provides a complete list of the travel literature contained in Twain's personal library.
Product Details :
Genre |
: History |
Author |
: Harold H. Hellwig |
Publisher |
: McFarland |
Release |
: 2015-01-28 |
File |
: 228 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781476600024 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Mark Twain has been one of the most popular American writers since 1868. This book shifts the focus of Twain studies from the writer to the reader. This study of Twain’s readership and lecture audiences makes use of statistics, literary biography, twentieth-century newspapers, memoirs, diaries, travel journals, letters, literature, interviews, and reading circle reports. The book allows the audience of Mark Twain to speak for themselves in defining their relationship to his work. Twain collected letters from his readers but there are also many other sources of which critics should be aware. The voices of these readers present their views, their likes—and sometimes dislikes, their emotional reactions and identification, and their deep attachment and love for Twain’s characters, stories, themes, and sensibilities. Bringing together contemporary reactions to Twain and his works and those of later audiences, this book paints a portrait of the American people and of American society and culture. While the book is about Mark Twain, or Samuel Clemens, it presents a larger cultural study of twentieth-century America and the early years of the twentieth century. The book includes Twain’s international audience but makes its majorly scholarly contribution in the analysis of Twain’s audience in America. It analyzes the people and their values, their reading habits and cultural views, their everyday experiences in the face of the drastic changes of the emerging nation coping with cataclysmic events, such as the Industrial Revolution and the consequences of the Civil War. This book serves as a model for using the audience of a prominent writer to analyze American history, American culture, and the American psyche. This book examines a historical time and an emerging national consciousness that defined the American identity after the Civil War.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Literary Criticism |
Author |
: Robert McParland |
Publisher |
: Lexington Books |
Release |
: 2014-09-24 |
File |
: 239 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780739190524 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
This broad-ranging companion brings together respected American and European critics and a number of up-and-coming scholars to provide an overview of Twain, his background, his writings, and his place in American literary history. One of the most broad-ranging volumes to appear on Mark Twain in recent years Brings together respected Twain critics and a number of younger scholars in the field to provide an overview of this central figure in American literature Places special emphasis on the ways in which Twain's works remain both relevant and important for a twenty-first century audience A concluding essay evaluates the changing landscape of Twain criticism
Product Details :
Genre |
: Literary Criticism |
Author |
: Peter Messent |
Publisher |
: John Wiley & Sons |
Release |
: 2015-08-17 |
File |
: 597 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781119045397 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
This book examines the relationship between American Protestants and Palestine from 1842-1917. The eastward views of Palestine drew the ancient biblical past into the present for Protestants, thus bringing a sharper focus to a new frontier and inventing the idea of a Christian Holy Land.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Religion |
Author |
: Stephanie Stidham Rogers |
Publisher |
: Lexington Books |
Release |
: 2011-01-06 |
File |
: 176 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780739148440 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Mark Twain, American Humorist examines the ways that Mark Twain’s reputation developed at home and abroad in the period between 1865 and 1882, years in which he went from a regional humorist to national and international fame. In the late 1860s, Mark Twain became the exemplar of a school of humor that was thought to be uniquely American. As he moved into more respectable venues in the 1870s, especially through the promotion of William Dean Howells in the Atlantic Monthly, Mark Twain muddied the hierarchical distinctions between class-appropriate leisure and burgeoning forms of mass entertainment, between uplifting humor and debased laughter, and between the literature of high culture and the passing whim of the merely popular.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Literary Criticism |
Author |
: Tracy Wuster |
Publisher |
: University of Missouri Press |
Release |
: 2017-12-01 |
File |
: 502 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780826274113 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Agriculture in the United States has changed dramatically in the last two hundred years. Economic transformation marked by the expansion of the industrial economy and big business has contributed to an increase in industrial food production. Amid this change, policymakers and cultural critics have debated the best way to produce food and wealth for an expanding population with imperialistic tendencies. In a sweeping overview, Beyond the Fruited Plain traces the connections between nineteenth-century literature, agriculture, and U.S. territorial and economic expansion. Bringing together theories of globalization and ecocriticism, Kathryn Cornell Dolan offers new readings on the texts of such literary figures as Herman Melville, Frank Norris, Mark Twain, Henry David Thoreau, and Harriet Beecher Stowe as they examine conflicts of food, labor, class, race, gender, and time—issues still influencing U.S. food politics today. Beyond the Fruited Plain shows how these authors use their literature to imagine agricultural alternatives to national practices and in so doing prefigure twenty-first-century concerns about globalization, resource depletion, food security, and the relation of industrial agriculture to pollution, disease, and climate change.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Literary Criticism |
Author |
: Kathryn Cornell Dolan |
Publisher |
: U of Nebraska Press |
Release |
: 2014-12-01 |
File |
: 284 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780803249882 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
This book begins the first multi-volume biography of Samuel Clemens to appear in over a century. In the succeeding years, Clemens biographers have either tailored their narratives to fit the parameters of a single volume or focused on a particular period or aspect of Clemens’s life, because the whole of that epic life cannot be compressed into a single volume. In The Life of Mark Twain, Gary Scharnhorst has chosen to write a complete biography plotted from beginning to end, from a single point of view, on an expansive canvas. With dozens of Mark Twain biographies available, what is left unsaid? On average, a hundred Clemens letters and a couple of Clemens interviews surface every year. Scharnhorst has located documents relevant to Clemens’s life in Missouri, along the Mississippi River, and in the West, including some which have been presumed lost. Over three volumes, Scharnhorst elucidates the life of arguably the greatest American writer and reveals the alchemy of his gifted imagination.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Biography & Autobiography |
Author |
: Gary Scharnhorst |
Publisher |
: University of Missouri Press |
Release |
: 2018-03-30 |
File |
: 719 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780826274007 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
This book reflects, comments on and adds to a fast growing field of travel writing studies. The twenty-five papers in this volume rely on a variety of theoretical and methodological approaches and explore a diverse body of travel writing texts created over the last three hundred years in English, Polish, Hungarian and French. The book is divided into three parts. The first one includes papers which apply the findings of post-structuralism, generic and cultural criticism as well as narratology to explore theories, canons and genres in travel writing drawing material not only from non-fictional and fictional prose narratives but also from poetry and tragedy. The second and third parts contain papers on a wide selection of travel writing texts, both fictional and non-fictional, written in Anglophone, as well as other literary traditions. They are arranged chronologically: the second part is devoted to texts written in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, while the third part focuses on those written in the twentieth and twenty first centuries.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Literary Criticism |
Author |
: Grzegorz Moroz |
Publisher |
: Cambridge Scholars Publishing |
Release |
: 2010-02-19 |
File |
: 285 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781443820455 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Tracks the genesis and evolution of Twain's reputation as a writer, revealing how and why the writer has been under fire since the advent of his career.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Criticism |
Author |
: Joe B. Fulton |
Publisher |
: Boydell & Brewer |
Release |
: 2018 |
File |
: 308 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781640140349 |