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Achilles and the Tortoise: Mark Twain's Fictions
 
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Achilles and the Tortoise: Mark Twain's Fictions [Hardcover]

Clark Griffith (Author)


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Book Description

April 1998

 Covering the entire body of Mark Twain's fiction, Clark Griffith in Achilles and the Tortoise answers two questions: How did Mark Twain write? And why is he funny? Griffith defines and demonstrates Mark Twain's poetics and, in doing so, reveals Twain's ability to create and sustain human laughter.

 Through a close reading of the fictions–short and long, early and late–Griffith contends that Mark Twain's strength lay not in comedy or in satire or (as the 19th century understood the term) even in the practice of humor. Rather his genius lay in the joke, specifically the "sick joke." For all his finesse and seeming variety, Twain tells the same joke, with its single cast of doomed and damned characters, its single dead-end conclusion, over and over endlessly.

As he attempted to attain the comic resolution and comically transfigured characters he yearned for, Twain forever played, for Griffith, the role of the Achilles of Zeno's Paradox. Like the tortoise that Achilles cannot overtake in Zeno's tale, the richness of comic life forever remained outside Twain's grasp.

The last third of Griffith's study draws parallels between Mark Twain and Herman Melville. Although the two authors never met and seem not to have read each other's works, they labored under the sense of what, in Moby-Dick, Ishmael calls "a vast practical joke . . . at nobody's expense but [one's] own." The laughter occasioned by this cosmic conspiracy shapes the career of Huckleberry Finn fully as much as it does Ishmael's voyage. Out of the laughter are generated the respective obsessions of Captain Ahab and Bartleby, of Pudd'nhead Wilson and Hadleyburg. Reduced at last to a dry mock, the laughter is the prevailing tone of both Billy Budd and The Mysterious Stranger Manuscripts.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Driving still another nail in the coffin of the old, popular view of Twain as America's genial comic, Griffith delves considerably deeper into the metaphysical than any previous studies of the man William Dean Howells once called the Lincoln of our literature. Seen as through a glass, darkly, each sliver of Twain's work appears to reflect its writer's "vision of a complete moral and social futility." The conviction that Griffith sees in this dark Twain?and the reason behind the book's title, which alludes to the notion that, no matter how hard he tries, Achilles will never overtake the tortoise?is that life is but a sick joke in which progress of any kind is nothing more than a cruel illusion. This study casts much of Twain's work in a fresh, new light. Recommended for all large public and upper-division academic libraries.?Charles Nash, Cottey Coll., Nevada, MO
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Clark Griffith's Achilles and the Tortoise is effortlessly witty yet built upon long cogitation with meticulous carpentry, fitting and refitting together the intricate sections of his argument. It is quite deliberately individualistic and polemical yet draws upon awesomely wide reading to support its judgments. With deceptive simplicity yet, eventually, multilayered sophistication it keeps asking: Why is Mark Twain 'funny'? It culminates with a dazzling analysis of all three of the Mysterious Stranger fables, but the entire book conducts a challenging, original, and bracing experience."
—Louis Budd, Duke University
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: University of Alabama Press (April 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0817309039
  • ISBN-13: 978-0817309039
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,744,720 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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