Title: Understanding Mark Twain: Mark Twain
1Understanding Mark Twain Mark Twains Novels
2- At my blog, TwainProject.BlogSpot.com, I post
Twain related articles and photos that showcase
his time in Redding, Connecticut. - One day, after a post about one of the Centennial
Celebrations we were having to commemorate his
life in Redding, I received the following
comment/rant
3- Mark Twain is the kind of boring writer that my
teachers tried to push down my throat in Middle
School and High School. If there is any way to
learn about the way people lived back then,
reading Twain is not it. If theres a literary
icon or role model for the 19th century, Mark
Twain is not the one. - His scatterbrained stories have no meaning or
reason behind them. He simply wrote for the sake
of writing
4- The remarks echoed those made by Danbury CTs
High School English Department Chairman last year
in the Danbury News-Times - His Twains influence is waning. Its a lot
more difficult to get kids interested in his
writings. Sometimes, its because its more
satirical and less blunt humor than they hear
today.
5- The issue here is real- teachers students dont
get Twain because they dont know Twain. After a
great deal of thought discussion with others, I
concluded that we may be teaching Twain wrong. - What if kids got to know Twain first?
- Maybe if they better understood his life
experiences, theyd understand why he wrote what
he wrote and want to read his works.
6- Here is a preview of my solution to this issue,
and what Id like to present to classrooms across
America.
7Hellomy name is Samuel L. Clemens. A.K.A. Mark
Twain!
8- I came in with Halleys Comet in 1835. It is
coming again next year (1910), and I expect to go
out with it. It will be the greatest
disappointment of my life if I dont go out with
Halleys Comet. - -Mark Twain, a Biography In 1910, Halleys
Comet reached perihelion on April 20th and Mark
Twain died on the 21st.
9Halleys Comet
Died 04/21/1910
Born 11/30/1835
Redding, Connecticut
Florida, Missouri
10Sure You could call me Rags to Riches
11Samuel Langhorne Clemens, was born in this cabin
in the small frontier settlement of Florida,
Missouri.
12Interior of Florida, Missouri home
13- He was born two months premature, on November
30th 1835. - The sixth child of John and Jane Clemens.
- Premature babies at that time period did not
usually survive. The frontier was a harsh
environment and children routinely died from
diseases such as measles, smallpox, scarlet fever
and malaria.
14- When I first saw him I could see no promise in
him. - Jane Clemens, his mother.
15- Sam survived, but would spent a good amount of
his first four years of life in bed. There he
would absorb and retain many of the sounds and
voices that surrounded him. - Hearing is believed to develop very quickly in
premature babies and Sam would exhibit an unusual
ability to retain the sounds he heard around him
in his younger years, especially, the dialects of
speech.
16- He never stopped performing the earliest songs
and spirituals he heard, and as a mature writer
he could reproduce entire blocks of spoken
conversation. - His capacity to transform commonplace spoken
language into literature, like any artists gift,
remains beyond understanding. - -Ron Powers, Mark Twain, a Life
17- Other Talented Premature Babies
- Pablo Picasso
- Isaac Newton
- Albert Einstein
- Charles Darwin
- Renoir
- John Keats
- Franklin Roosevelt
- Stevie Wonder
18- Many, if not all, of Mark Twain novels and
stories were directly tied to his life
experiences. - His earliest life experiences, specifically his
exposure to slaves and slavery, are brought to
life in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. - In many ways Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is
autobiographical.
19- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Although the Missouri he grew up in never joined
the Confederacy, it was a world in which slavery
was accepted and practiced by most white
families Sam's parents owned slaves, his Uncle
John did too. - In fact, slavery was defended by all of
Missouris public institutions, including the
churches.
20- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- In Twains Notebook 35 he writes
- In those slave-holding days the whole community
was agreed as to one thing- the awful sacredness
of slave property. - It shows that that strange thing, the
conscience - the unerring monitor - can be
trained to approve any wild thing you want it to
approve if you begin its education early stick
to it.
21- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Unlike many Missourians, Twain left Missouri in
his teens and traveled to several Northern States
that frowned upon Slavery and the hatred that
fueled it.
22Sams teenage travels 2,000 miles
23- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- As he matured, he came to realize the wrongs that
he had unknowingly been a part of and through his
writings he exposed the wrongs that he had seen
committed.
24- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- In Following the Equator, he says
- When I was ten years old I saw a man fling a
lump of iron-ore at a slave-man in anger, for
merely doing something awkwardly- as if that were
a crime. It bounded from the mans skull, and the
man fell and never spoke again. He was dead in an
hour Nobody in the village approved of that
murder, but of course no one said much about it.
(Chapter 38)
25- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- His association with Slavery left him with a
legacy of guilt, guilt that he tried to lessen
through acts of charity. He donated money and
made special appearances at fundraising events
for numerous African American Churches,
Institutes, and Associations. He also supported
individuals.
26- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- In 1885, the year Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
was released, he anonymously paid the tuition for
Warner T. McGuinn, a struggling African American
law student at Yale Law School. - In a letter to Yales Law School Dean, he noted
We have ground the manhood out of them, the
shame is ours, not theirs, we should pay for
it.
27- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is powerful
because of its realism. The situations, the
topics, the conversations, and the dialects he
uses in those conversations all come from Twains
unique life experiences. - Jims words and the way he speaks are all tied
to Twains childhood
28- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Ron Powers, Mark Twain, a Life
- He heard his first slave voices before the age
of four, and sought them out through the rest of
his childhood and beyond. - no human voices, save his own mothers, caught
his imagination quite like those of the Negro
slaves
29- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Those voices spoke in a way different from the
people in his family quick, delicious, throbbing
with urgencies half-named, half-encoded. They
conjured mind-pictures lightning bolts,
apparitions from the spirit world, chariots
swooping down from heaven the slave voices
treated language as a cherished creature, to be
passed around, partaken of
30- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- One of the slave voices that influenced Sams
life was a middle aged slave known to him as
Uncle Danl - Hed later recall the privileged nights he, his
cousins the slave children clustered at Danls
feet to hear him tell his thunderous stories.
31- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- He has served me well, these many, many
yearsspiritually I have had his welcome company
have staged him in books as his own name and as
Jim - It was on the farm that I got my strong liking
for his race and my appreciation of its fine
qualities.
32- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn took Twain 8 years
to write. Between manuscript 1 and 2, he made
more than 1,700 revisions. 88 percent of these
revisions being word changes, spelling,
punctuation and adding emphasis. He used the
words he used for a reason. - The N-Word appears 219 times in the novel and
its usage is deliberate.
33- "The difference between the almost right word and
the right word is really a large matter it's
the difference between the lightning bug and the
lightning." - -Mark Twain
34- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- The N-Word appears 219 times for two reasons.
- 1. Its usage is historically correct. That is
how white people referred to African- Americans
in that time period. - 2. It shows/screams at us how wrong and
hurtful that mindset was. -
35- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- As the novel progresses, Huck matures and
realizes the wrongs of the slavery society hes
grown up in much like Twain himself did. - Hucks decision to reject that societys values
and go to Hell, rather than betray his friend
Jim is one of the novels most powerful moments. -
36- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Huck discovers "you can't pray a lie" and that
helping Jim is the right thing to do -- even if
society's most pious and learned insist that
aiding a runaway is perverted and wicked. -
37- Understanding Huckleberry Finn
- Twain once described the novel as
- "a book of mine where a sound heart and a
deformed conscience come into collision and
conscience suffers a defeat." He also once said
My books are simply autobiographies - and in many ways Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
is just that
38In summary I am not a Racist.
39Now back to my life story.
40Many of Twains characters, including Huckleberry
Finn, were a product of his childhood
experiences in Hannibal.
41Sams family moved to nearby Hannibal, Missouri
in 1839, where hed enjoy his boyhood in the
presence of the broad Mississippi River.
42- Location, Location, Location
- Hannibal was the center of America at a time when
America was making the transition from East to
West. Sam had a very unique, front row seat to
civilization Immigrants, Merchants, Speculators,
Gamblers, Thieves, Politicians, Preachers,
Runaways Indians he saw it all on the river
front and he soaked it all in.
43The Great Frontier The West is largely unsettled
by Americans.
United States in 1835
44- Location, Location, Location
- Because of Hannibals River-side location and
Americas Westward expansion, Sam would
experience a very diverse group of individuals or
as Ron Powers notes in Mark Twain, a Life - a continuing vaudeville of floating humanity.
45- When I find a well-drawn character in fiction or
biography I generally take a warm personal
interest in him, for the reason that I have known
him before--met him on the river. - - Mark Twain, Life on the Mississippi
46- Location, Location, Location
- The education that Sam would receive in Hannibal
from the age of four to the age of seventeen
would come through loud and clear in his novels - Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer
47From here I would go on to describe his
childhood, education, teenage travels, etc
Feedback is welcomed, please e-mail me
at bcolley_at_colleyweb.com