Keyword [Mark Twain] Result: 81 - 100 | Page: 5 of 6 |
81. | Manifest individuation: Archetypal progressions in Mark Twain's 'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn' and Cormac McCarthy's 'Blood Meridian' |
82. | Hoax literature: Reading Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, and Mark Twain |
83. | The contested quest for cultural liberation in Mark Twain's 'Huckleberry Finn': Literary contexts of place, class, and rac |
84. | The Gothic as counter-discourse: Mark Twain, Charles Chesnutt and Toni Morrison |
85. | The new technological man: Constructing technology, masculinity, and realism in the works of Mark Twain |
86. | Beneath Mark Twain: Justice and gender in Twain's early Western writing, 1861--1873 |
87. | Jim: Twain's authentic hero. A study of the characteristics of Jim's heroism in Mark Twain's novel 'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn' |
88. | Decoding distraction: Attention in American culture, 1871--1916 (John Dewey, Mark Twain) |
89. | Not our memory: Contested visions of family at the turn of the American century (Henry James, Mark Twain, Charles Waddell Chesnutt, Pauline E. Hopkins, Nella Larsen) |
90. | Painful travels, painful writings: Reading travel narratives by Mark Twain, Pearl S. Buck, and Carlos Bulosan |
91. | Mark Twain at the circus: Circus culture and the literary ringmaster |
92. | Serialization and 'The Book of Mrs. Eddy': A Rereading of Mark Twain's 'Christian Science' Materials |
93. | Mark Twain in Japan: Mark Twain's literature and 20th century Japanese juvenile literature and popular culture |
94. | Liberal democracy and cultural greatness: Cooper, Twain, and Howells on the possibilities of individual development (James Fenimore Cooper, Mark Twain, William Dean Howells) |
95. | Rewriting paradise: Countering desire, denial, and the exotic in American literary representations of the Pacific (George Tweed, Mark Twain, Herman Melville, Jack London) |
96. | Reading the text that isn't there: Paranoia in the nineteenth-century American novel (Charles Brockden Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Mark Twain) |
97. | Mark Twain in Nevada: A beginning, 1861--1864 |
98. | American regional theory: Toward a theory of the region in the United States and its roles in the production of American literature and culture (Mark Twain, William Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor, Toni Morrison) |
99. | Homicidal economics in Mark Twain: Legacies of American theft |
100. | Dialect, stereotype, and humor: Linguistic variation and its place in humor studies through the lens of Mark Twain's dialect humor |
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