Making Mark Twain Work in the ClassroomJames S. Leonard Duke University Press, 1999 - 318 Seiten How does one teach Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, a book as controversial as it is central to the American literary canon? This collection of essays edited by James S. Leonard offers practical classroom methods for instructors dealing with the racism, the casual violence, and the role of women, as well as with structural and thematic discrepancies in the works of Mark Twain. The essays in Making Mark Twain Work in the Classroom reaffirm the importance of Twain in the American literature curriculum from high school through graduate study. Addressing slavery and race, gender, class, religion, language and ebonics, Americanism, and textual issues of interest to instructors and their students, the contributors offer guidance derived from their own demographically diverse classroom experiences. Although some essays focus on such works as A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court and The Innocents Abroad, most discuss the hotly debated Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, viewed alternately in this volume as a comic masterpiece or as evidence of Twain's growing pessimism--but always as an effective teaching tool. By placing Twain's work within the context of nineteenth-century American literature and culture, Making Mark Twain Work in the Classroom will interest all instructors of American literature. It will also provoke debate among Americanists and those concerned with issues of race, class, and gender as they are represented in literature. Contributors. Joseph A. Alvarez, Lawrence I. Berkove, Anthony J. Berret, S.J., Wesley Britton, Louis J. Budd, James E. Caron, Everett Carter, Jocelyn Chadwick-Joshua, Pascal Covici Jr., Beverly R. David, Victor Doyno, Dennis W. Eddings, Shelley Fisher Fishkin, S. D. Kapoor, Michael J. Kiskis, James S. Leonard, Victoria Thorpe Miller, Stan Poole, Tom Reigstad, David E. E. Sloane, David Tomlinson |
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Seite 50
... human and the con- servative idea was taken right to the end of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn . At the same time , one cannot deny that the questions of man as property vs. freedom and human dignity that Douglass so forcefully raised ...
... human and the con- servative idea was taken right to the end of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn . At the same time , one cannot deny that the questions of man as property vs. freedom and human dignity that Douglass so forcefully raised ...
Seite 116
... human feeling and , it seems , for any recollection that human beings are involved . This in- stance of transcendent principle obliterating ( or at least hiding ) the bare face of human presence exemplifies Hank's flawed understanding ...
... human feeling and , it seems , for any recollection that human beings are involved . This in- stance of transcendent principle obliterating ( or at least hiding ) the bare face of human presence exemplifies Hank's flawed understanding ...
Seite 137
... human being , and one of the best he has known . And yet , being a creature of his society , he cannot translate this knowledge from the individual to the class : blacks in the abstract will remain things for him , and his " conscience ...
... human being , and one of the best he has known . And yet , being a creature of his society , he cannot translate this knowledge from the individual to the class : blacks in the abstract will remain things for him , and his " conscience ...
Inhalt
The Uses of the Last Twelve Chapters | |
An Approach to Teaching Twain | 31 |
Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc in Todays Classroom | 55 |
Urheberrecht | |
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