Includes bibliographical references and index. - Print version record
Electronic reproduction; Mode of access: World Wide Web
Randall KnoperMark Twain and human nature / Tom Quirk: Mark Twain and nation
Andrew DixMark Twain and the literary construction of the American West / Gary Scharnhorst: Twain and the Mississippi
Susan K. Harris: Mark Twain and America's Christian mission abroad
Richard S. Lowry: Mark Twain and whiteness
Peter Stoneley: Mark Twain and gender
T. J. Lustig: Twain and modernity
James S. Leonard: Mark Twain and politics
Scott Michaelsen: "The State, It Is I": Mark Twain, imperialism, and the new Americanists
Gavin Jones: Twain, language and the Southern humorists
Christopher Gair: The "American Dickens": Mark Twain and Charles Dickens
Lawrence I. Berkove: Nevada influences on Mark Twain
Stephen Railton / Mark Twain, William Dean Howells, and realism / Peter Messent: The Twain-Cable combination
Thomas D. Zlatic: "I Don't Know A from B": Mark Twain and orality
Leland Krauth: Mark Twain and the profession of writing
Martin T. Buinicki: Mark Twain and the promise and problems of magazines
Shelley Fisher Fishkin: Mark Twain and the stage
R. Kent Rasmussen and Mark Dawidziak: Mark Twain on the screen
Holger Kersten: Mark Twain and Continental Europe
Jeffrey Alan Melton: Mark Twain and travel writing
Henry B. Wonham: Mark Twain's short fiction
Linda A. Morris: The adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Prince and the pauper as juvenile literature
Victor Doyno: Plotting and narrating "Huck"
Hilton Obenzinger: Going to Tom's hell in Huckleberry Finn
Sam Halliday: History, "civilization," and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
David Lionel Smith: Mark Twain's dialects
John Bird: Killing half a dog, half a novel: the trouble with the tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson and The Comedy those extraordinary twins
Forrest G. Robinson: Dreaming better dreams: the late writing of Mark Twain
Louis J. Budd: Mark Twain's visual humor
Cameron C. Nickels: Mark Twain and post-Civil War humor
Gregg Camfield: Mark Twain and amiable humor
Bruce Michelson: Mark Twain and the enigmas of wit
Alan Gribben.: The state of Mark Twain studies
|