The Mercurial Mark Twain(s): Reception History, Audience Engagement, and Iconic Authorship

Author:   James L. Machor
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032406572


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   07 October 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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The Mercurial Mark Twain(s): Reception History, Audience Engagement, and Iconic Authorship


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Author:   James L. Machor
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.640kg
ISBN:  

9781032406572


ISBN 10:   1032406577
Pages:   348
Publication Date:   07 October 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Preface Part 1 Chapter 1: Twain’s Early Reception: The Humorist and More Chapter 2: Notorious Celebrity: From Tom Sawyer to Huckleberry Finn Chapter 3: Vintage Variations and New Mark Twains, 1889-1899 Chapter 4: The Final Decade: From Celebrity Polemicist to Mercurial Icon Part 2 Chapter 5: Twain’s Early Afterlives, 1910-1939 Chapter 6: Old Twains, New Twains, and Fresh Controversies: Race, Myth, Adaptations, and the Cold War, 1940-1959 Chapter 7: Texts, Politics, and Hypercanonization: Corpus, Canon, and Significances in the 1960s and 1970s Chapter 8: Ever-Changing Marks: Shaping Twain by Century’s End Notes Index

Reviews

Numerous scholars have chronicled how book reviewers and other cultural commentators responded to Twain and his works both before and after his death in 1910. Recently, there has been increasing interest in how less-elite readers responded to Twain’s writings and in how Twain’s popular and critical reputations were forged in the 20th century. Prominent examples of such scholarship are Dear Mark Twain: Letters from His Readers, ed. by R. Kent Rasmussen (2013); Robert McParland’s Mark Twain’s Audience: A Critical Analysis of Reader Responses to the Writings of Mark Twain (2014); and Joe Fulton’s Mark Twain Under Fire: Reception and Reputation, Criticism and Controversy, 1851–2015 (2016). Machor wisely does not attempt a comprehensive study of Twain’s reception, instead presenting an extremely readable, broad overview of how Twain and his books (excluding serialized versions, translations, and pirated editions) have been received by particular audiences, chiefly American and British. Incorporating many more of the fan letters written to Twain during his lifetime than previous scholars have, convincingly refuting a number of previous scholarly assertions, and offering persuasive analyses, this study should prove very useful for years to come. Summing Up: Highly Recommended. --C. Johanningsmeier, University of Nebraska at Omaha


Author Information

James L. Machor is an Emeritus Professor of English at Kansas State University. He is the author of Reading Fiction in Antebellum America: Informed Response and Reception Histories, 1820-1865 (2011) and Pastoral Cities: Urban Ideals and the Symbolic Landscape of America (1987). He has edited Readers in History: Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Contexts of Response (1993) and co-edited Reception Study: From Literary Theory to Cultural Studies (2001) and New Directions in American Reception Study (2008). He is also the senior co-editor of Reception: Texts, Readers, Audiences, History, the peer-reviewed journal of the Reception Study Society.

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