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Dark Twins: Imposture and Identity in Mark Twain's America
 
 
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Dark Twins: Imposture and Identity in Mark Twain's America [Paperback]

Susan Gillman (Author)

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Book Description

0226293874 978-0226293875 January 15, 1989 1
"Many persons have such a horror of being taken in," wrote P. T. Barnum, "that they believe themselves to be a sham and are continually humbugging themselves." Mark Twain enjoyed trading on that horror, as the many confidence men, assumed identities, and disguised characters in his fiction attest. In Dark Twins, Susan Gillman challenges the widely held assumption that Twain's concern with identity is purely biographical and argues that what has been regarded as a problem of individual psychology must be located instead within American society around the turn of the century. Drawing on Twain's whole writing career, but focusing on the controversial late period of social "pessimism" and literary "incoherence," Gillman situates Twain and his work in historical context, demonstrating the complex interplay between his most intimate personal and authorial identity and the public attitudes toward race, gender, and science.

Gillman shows that laws regulating race classification, paternity, and rape cases underwrite Twain's critical exploration of racial and sexual difference in the writings of the 1890s and after, most strikingly in the little-known manuscripts that Gillman calls the "tales of transvestism." The "pseudoscience" of spiritualism and the "science" of psychology provide the cultural vocabularies essential to Twain's fantasy and science fiction writings of his last two decades. Twain stands forth finally as a representative man, not only a child of his culture, but also as one implicated in a continuing American anxiety about freedom, race, and identity.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Ever since William Dean Howells insisted in his memoir My Mark Twain on defying his own title and calling his friend "Clemens...instead of Mark Twain, which seemed always somehow to mask him," the peculiarly double personality Samuel Clemens/Mark Twain has continued both to elude and to fascinate. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
transvestite tales, copyright hearings, birthday dinner speech, autobiographical dictation, mental telegraphy, dream tales, false heir, mixed offspring, haunting mystery, subliminal self, race purity
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mark Twain, Pudd'nhead Wilson, Wapping Alice, Those Extraordinary Twins, New York, Evelyn Thaw, William James, Civil War, Dawson's Landing, Tom Driscoll, Evelyn Nesbit, Following the Equator, Samuel Clemens, Huckleberry Finn, James Cox, Joan of Arc, Stanford White, The Great Dark, The American Claimant, Christian Science, Colonel Sellers, Medieval Romance, Simon Wheeler, South Africa, Tom Sawyer
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