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Mark Twain's Audience

A Critical Analysis of Reader Responses to the Writings of Mark Twain

Mark Twain's Audience cover

Mark Twain's Audience

A Critical Analysis of Reader Responses to the Writings of Mark Twain

Description

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.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. America’s Mark Twain
Chapter 2. The Innocents Abroad and the American Reader
Chapter 3. Marketing Mark Twain
Chapter 4. The Trouble That Began at Eight: Audiences for Twain’s Lectures
Chapter 5. Childhood Reading
Chapter 6. Reading in Cultural Institutions
Chapter 7. The Variety of Readers: Gender, Race, Ethnicity
Chapter 8. The Global Audience
Chapter 9. Mark Twain’s Audience and His Afterlife
Notes
Bibliography
About the author
Index

Product details

Published Sep 24 2014
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 238
ISBN 9798216346401
Imprint Lexington Books
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Robert McParland

Robert McParland is Professor of English and the H…

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