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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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