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Throughout his career Mark Twain viewed the relations between the
individual and his community with mixed feelings, and this book
explores both the ambiguities of Twain's attitude and their effect
upon his fiction. In the earlier novels -- most notably The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn -- the protagonist
enjoys a dual position -- at liberty to follow his own inclinations
while retaining his conventional place as a respected member of the
community -- and the resolutions of these works are built upon this
duality. Facing realities which the earlier fiction evaded, Twain
in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court found himself in a
dilemma that he was unable to resolve: the community was no longer
seen as a moral refuge and, most importantly, the individual was no
longer seen as superior to the community standards against which he
revolted. Thomas Blues contends that Twain's failure to reconcile
this opposition largely accounts for the bitter, cynical fiction at
the close of his career, and through use of the
individual-community relationship he offers here fresh
interpretations of Twain's most widely read novels.
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Atmosphere
Taylor Jenkins Reid
Paperback
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Discovery Miles 3 190
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