Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry FinnHarold Bloom Bloom's Literary Criticism, 2007 - Всего страниц: 248 Hailed by writers and critics alike as one of the most important American novels ever published, Mark Twain's quintessential coming-of-age story ""The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"" gave a distinct voice to American literature. As the respected critics in this volume attest, Twain's novel sustains the tests of time and interpretation. This fully updated volume also offers perceptive supplementary materials, such as a chronology and an index, that will come in handy for students writing research papers on this beloved work. |
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Стр. 36
... feel greasy no more , and so anybody in town would take it in a minute , let alone a hairball . ( p . 21 ) In its ... feels comfortable enough to confide in Jim the signs of pap's imminent arrival , just as Jim generously lowers his ...
... feel greasy no more , and so anybody in town would take it in a minute , let alone a hairball . ( p . 21 ) In its ... feels comfortable enough to confide in Jim the signs of pap's imminent arrival , just as Jim generously lowers his ...
Стр. 50
... feels compelled to go against a flow of events ; in his case it is one that could take him to New Orleans and a worse form of slavery than he has ever before experienced . Huck and Jim thus fortuitously break away from the grasp of a ...
... feels compelled to go against a flow of events ; in his case it is one that could take him to New Orleans and a worse form of slavery than he has ever before experienced . Huck and Jim thus fortuitously break away from the grasp of a ...
Стр. 152
... feels ashamed as well as grateful , but also against Jim's refusal to " learn " his place when Huck feels he needs to assert his superiority . Each time Huck uses words like fool or nigger , it is Huck's need for whiteness that is ...
... feels ashamed as well as grateful , but also against Jim's refusal to " learn " his place when Huck feels he needs to assert his superiority . Each time Huck uses words like fool or nigger , it is Huck's need for whiteness that is ...
Содержание
The Realism of Huckleberry Finn | 7 |
Huck and Jim | 43 |
Huck Jim and the BlackandWhite Fallacy | 55 |
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Adventures of Huckleberry African Americans ain't American Literature argue Aunt Sally believe Bricksville Cambridge chapter character civilization comic critics culture dead deadpan dream Duke and King Eliot episode escape essay evasion father feels fiction floating flow freedom Grangerfords Harold Bloom Huck and Jim Huck Finn Huck tells Huck's Huckleberry Finn human imagination interpretation Jim and Huck Jim's joke laugh laughter Leo Marx Library of America Lionel Trilling literary logic Mark Twain meaning Miss Watson Mississippi River moral narrative narrator never pap's Phelps play plot Pudd'nhead Wilson racial racist raft raftsmen's passage reader realism rhetorical satire Sawyer Sawyer's Conspiracy says scene sense sequel Sherburn sinister slave slavery snapper social society steamboat T. S. Eliot tall tale Territory there's Tom Sawyer Tom's Trilling Twain's deadpan Twain's novel Univ warn't what's funny white inside writing York