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Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) 1835-1910

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Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) 1835-1910 A literary classic is a book which people praise and don t read Mark Twain – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) 1835-1910


1
Samuel Langhorne Clemens(Mark Twain)1835-1910
A literary classic is a book which people praise
and dont read Mark Twain
2
Sam Clemens as a boy
  • Born on November 30, 1835 in Florida, Missouri
  • Sixth of seven children
  • Only three siblings survived childhood

Do not put off until tomorrow what can be put
off till day-after-tomorrow just as well.
3
Sam Clemens as a boy
  • Brought up in Hannibal, MO, moved when four years
    old
  • A sickly, strange, quiet child who hated the
    indoors and liked to run away.
  • Purposely contracted the measles to gain
    attention and nearly died
  • Father died when Sam was 11

By trying, we can easily learn to endure
adversity another mans, I mean.
4
Sam as a young man
  • Apprenticed to a printer and wrote for his
    brothers newspaper after his father died.

Worked as a type-setter and writer for the
Hannibal Journal When he turned 18, he became a
printer, living in several eastern cities,
including New York. Returned to Missouri at
22. Inspired to become a steamboat captain on a
trip to New Orleans When the Civil War ended
river traffic, he joined the Confederate army in
Missouri until it looked like they were going to
have to fight.
The man who doesnt read good books has no
advantage over the man who cant read them.
5
Sam Clemens becomes Mark Twain
  • Moved to Virginia City, Nevada, with his brother
    Orion and became a miner
  • Failed at mining so he went to work at The
    Territorial Enterprise as a writer
  • Used the pen-name Mark Twain for the first time
    in 1863

It is better to keep your mouth closed and let
people think you are a fool than to open it and
remove all doubt.
6
Mark Twain in California
  • Left for San Francisco to avoid a duel and became
    a reporter in 1864
  • Jim Smiley and his Jumping Frog was published
    around the country in 1865 giving Twain his
    first national fame
  • Visited Hawaii as a correspondent for The
    Sacramento Union
  • Set out on a tour of the Mediterranean and Europe
    in 1867 wrote about it successfully as The
    Innocents Abroad in 1869

Clothes make the man. Naked people have
little or no influence on society.
7
Marriage and Home Life
  • Writing success gave Twain enough money to marry
    Olivia Langdon in 1870

Moved to Buffalo, NY First child, son Langdon,
died at 19 months Eventually had three daughters
Susy, Clara, and Jean
8
Movin on up
  • The Twains moved to Hartford, Connecticut

Education that which reveals to the wise, and
conceals from the stupid, the vast limits of
their knowledge.
9
From travel writer to immortal artist
  • Started Huck Finn in 1876 but quit by chapter 16
    because of difficulties with the plot
  • Published
  • Tom Sawyer 1876
  • The Prince and the Pauper 1881
  • Life on the Mississippi 1883
  • Huckleberry Finn 1884

Dont go around saying the world owes you a
living. The world owes you nothing. It was here
first.
10
Later life
  • Susy died in 1896 while Twain was on a world tour
  • Olivia died in 1904
  • Later works were darker with a tinge of
    bitterness
  • Died on April 21, 1910

I have never let my schooling interfere with my
education.
11
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  • All modern literature comes from one book by
    Mark Twain called Huckleberry FinnAll American
    writing comes from that. There was nothing
    before. There has been nothing as good since.
  • -Ernest Hemingway

12
Huckleberry Finn
  • Huckleberry Finn is thought to be a sequel to The
    Adventures of Tom Sawyer, but the first sixteen
    chapters of Huck were written before Tom Sawyer
    was published.
  • The novel is really about a boys discovery of
    true morality by shedding the messed up
    conventions of society in favor of his own sense
    of right and wrong.
  • Huck Finn is a comedy in which the humor is
    disguised mostly ironic humor as real
    situations and people are different than Huck
    perceives them to be.

13
Plot
  • The plot is episodic, meaning that it has a
    series of separate situations, or episodes, that
    are almost unrelated but tied together by a
    certain character, theme, or device.
  • The Mississippi River is the plot device that
    holds the different episodes together.
  • The plot alternates between the idyllic life on
    the raft and the confusion, gullibility,
    callousness, and prejudice of the people within
    the towns along the banks of the river.

14
Characterization
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is the first
    American novel to use dialect (the way people
    really speak in a certain region) in such
    abundance
  • Huck is in the picaresque (rogue) novel tradition
    in which the main character is a rascal, thief or
    scoundrel
  • Huck is an unreliable narrator, meaning he cannot
    be trusted to see the action of the story
    accurately he has the perspective of a naïve,
    young boy
  • Hucks straightforward reporting of ridiculous
    situations provides much of the humor in the book
    as the reader sees what is going on while Huck
    may not.
  • Huck is a tableau rasa (a blank slate) untainted
    by societys traditions, relying on instinct and
    common sense

15
Themes
  • The hypocrisy of a certain type of religion
    Twain did not like Southern-based Christianity
    that taught love and compassion but sanctioned
    slavery
  • The ineffectualness of the law to protect the
    most innocent and weak members of society
  • Traditions that stifle creativity and common
    sense but promote conformity and
    narrow-mindedness are to be abandoned

16
Themes
  • Society is the individual violence, greed,
    conformity, laziness, gullibility, and
    selfishness of common citizens ruled by imperfect
    laws
  • Satire (making fun of a serious subject through
    exaggeration or mockery in order to improve the
    subject of mockery) of other melodramatic novels
    of the time period (melodramas being those plots
    that rely on suspense, sensational events, and
    coincidence)

17
Conflicts
  • Huck matures and develops into a moral human
    being as he journeys down the Mississippi, Hucks
    moral struggles are the central conflict of the
    novel as he frees himself from the taint of the
    society in which he grew up
  • Good vs. bad type of religion
  • Widow Douglass vs. Miss Watsons
  • Life on the raft vs. life in society on shore
  • Jim and Huck are free on the river and bound on
    land
  • Instinct vs. education
  • Hucks common sense vs. Toms book learning
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