Animals in the American Classics: How Natural History Inspired Great Fiction, Haunted Property: Slavery and the Gothic and Writing the Mind: Social Cognition in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction

IF 0.2 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN Mark Twain Annual Pub Date : 2023-11-01 DOI:10.5325/marktwaij.21.1.0170
Nathaniel Williams
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Abstract

Animals in the American Classics: How Natural History Inspired Great Fiction. Ed. John Cullen Gruesser. Texas A&M UP, 2022. 304 pp. $38.00, cloth.This is an absolutely beautiful book featuring numerous full-color illustrations including photographs, maps, naturalists’ drawings, and reproduced advertisements that portray the animals in each literary work covered. These contextual images augment strong essays, most of them centered on already well-established literary works including “The Gold-Bug,” Moby-Dick, and The Call of the Wild. John Bird’s essay on Twain’s “Jumping Frog” story exemplifies the best aspects of this approach; he focuses on the single work but brings in evidence from throughout Twain’s fiction, letters, and life. He also does an admirable job of covering the tangled publication history of rewrites and retitlings that Twain’s landmark sketch endured. Bird finds “underlying grim reality” in several of the “Jumping Frog” tale’s recounted events (116). He also notes the tale’s continued influence on art and at county fairs, concluding “Unlike much nineteenth-century American humor, ‘The Jumping Frog’ lives on” (129). Anyone teaching Twain’s sketch, from secondary-level to graduate courses, could find useful lecture content to share from Bird’s essay in this affordable, visually riveting scholarly book. Haunted Property: Slavery and the Gothic. Sarah Gilbreath Ford. UP of Mississippi, 2020. 248 pp. $110, cloth; $35, paper.Ford considers Pudd’nhead Wilson in a context spanning from Harriet Jacobs’s 1861 narrative to Natasha Tretheway’s 2006 poetry collection. Indeed, the book’s strength lies its long-view of the two topics in its subtitle (the Gothic literary tradition and U.S. slavery’s practice and legacy). That focus enables treating Twain alongside twentieth-century writers, such as Octavia Butler and Sherley Ann Williams, who are rarely connected with him. Ford builds from scholarship that foregrounds slavery’s role in defining ongoing legal and personal understandings of property ownership, and she addresses moments when fear over “loss of personhood” becomes Gothic horror. Roxy in Pudd’nhead Wilson lives such horror as someone within a system that will not “allow her to keep her son: he can either be killed, sold, or white” (85). Anyone covering Twain and the Gothic—or just curious to see Twain treated on the same page as some more recent literary giants—will find Ford’s book of high interest. Writing the Mind: Social Cognition in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction. Hannah Walser. Stanford UP, 2022. 272 pp. $60.00, cloth.Walser examines theory of mind (ToM) and the portrayal of cognition—or lack thereof—in an array of mostly antebellum books. In doing so, she complicates how we understand the truism that novels shape the way readers understand their fellow humans’ minds. When the book culminates in a study of both Huckleberry Finn and “A Double-Barreled Detective Story,” Walser focuses on a single element of social cognition: fooling, or humbug. Many studies have examined Twain’s manipulative or duplicitous characters, but Walser adds to the tradition admirably by tying it to larger understandings of “fooling” by P. T. Barnum, early-nineteenth-century French psychiatrist Jean-Étienne Esquirol, and others. For example, she notes that rather than address oath-breaking or outright lying, “Twainian deception involves skewing sensory evidence, a source in which most humans place a priori, relatively unexamined trust” (147). The chapter may help scholars wishing to scrutinize Twain’s more trickster-ish characters within the larger arena of social psychology.
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《美国经典中的动物:自然历史如何启发伟大小说》、《闹鬼的财产:奴隶制和哥特式》和《书写心灵:19世纪美国小说中的社会认知》
美国经典中的动物:自然历史如何启发伟大的小说。埃德:约翰·库伦·格鲁瑟。德州农工大学,2022年。304页,38.00美元,布。这是一本绝对美丽的书,有许多全彩插图,包括照片,地图,博物学家的绘画,以及复制的广告,描绘了每个文学作品中的动物。这些背景图像增强了强有力的文章,其中大多数集中在已经确立的文学作品上,包括《金甲虫》、《白鲸》和《野性的呼唤》。约翰·伯德(John Bird)关于吐温的《跳蛙》(Jumping Frog)故事的文章就是这种方法最好的例证;他专注于单一的作品,但从吐温的小说,信件和生活中带来了证据。他还做了一项令人钦佩的工作,讲述了吐温的里程碑式的小品所经历的改写和重新命名的复杂出版历史。伯德在《跳蛙》故事中讲述的几个事件中发现了“潜在的残酷现实”(116页)。他还注意到这个故事对艺术和乡村集市的持续影响,总结道:“与许多19世纪的美国幽默不同,‘跳蛙’活了下来”(129)。任何教吐温素描的人,从中学到研究生课程,都可以从伯德的文章中找到有用的讲座内容来分享,这本书价格实惠,视觉上引人入胜。闹鬼的财产:奴隶制和哥特式。莎拉·吉尔布雷斯·福特。密西西比州北部,2020年。248页,布110美元;35美元,纸。福特将威尔逊的研究背景从哈丽特·雅各布斯1861年的小说到娜塔莎·特雷特韦2006年的诗集。事实上,这本书的优势在于它从长远的角度看待副标题中的两个主题(哥特文学传统和美国奴隶制的实践和遗产)。这种关注使我们能够将吐温与20世纪的作家相提并论,比如奥克塔维亚·巴特勒和雪莉·安·威廉姆斯,他们很少与吐温联系在一起。福特从学者的角度出发,强调了奴隶制在定义持续的法律和个人对财产所有权的理解方面的作用,她还谈到了对“人格丧失”的恐惧成为哥特式恐怖的时刻。《Pudd 'nhead Wilson》中的Roxy生活在一个不允许她留下儿子的体制下:他要么被杀,要么被卖,要么被杀”(85页)。任何关注马克·吐温和哥特人的人,或者只是想看看马克·吐温和最近的一些文学巨匠在同一页上被对待的人,都会对福特的书很感兴趣。书写心灵:19世纪美国小说中的社会认知。汉娜瓦尔泽。斯坦福大学,2022年。272页,60美元,布。Walser在一系列主要是战前的书籍中研究了心智理论(ToM)和对认知的描述(或缺乏认知)。在这样做的过程中,她使我们如何理解小说塑造读者理解他人思想的方式这一真理变得更加复杂。在对《哈克贝利·费恩历险记》(Huckleberry Finn)和《双筒侦探故事》(a double - barsing Detective Story)的研究中,这本书达到了高潮,沃尔瑟把重点放在了社会认知的一个元素上:愚弄,或者说欺骗。许多研究都考察了吐温笔下的诡计多门的人物,但沃尔瑟将其与p·t·巴纳姆、19世纪早期法国精神病学家让·-Étienne埃斯基洛尔等人对“愚弄”的更广泛理解联系起来,令人钦佩地补充了这一传统。例如,她指出,“吐温式的欺骗涉及扭曲的感官证据,这是大多数人先验地、相对未经检验的信任的来源”,而不是解决违背誓言或直接撒谎的问题。这一章可能会帮助那些希望在社会心理学的大舞台上仔细审视吐温笔下那些更像骗子的人物的学者。
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来源期刊
Mark Twain Annual
Mark Twain Annual LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
14.30%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: The Mark Twain Annual publishes articles related to Mark Twain and those who surrounded him and serves as an outlet for new scholarship as well as new pedagogical approaches. It is the official publication of the Mark Twain Circle of America, an international association of people interested in the life and work of Mark Twain. The Circle encourages interest in Mark Twain and fosters the formal presentation of ideas about the author and his work, as well as the informal exchange of information among its members.
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Studying Mark Twain’s The Diaries of Adam and Eve from a Ghanaian Context Susy Clemens: The Final Years The Stakes of Stormfield: On Mark Twain’s Vision of Heaven Critical Insights: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Why I Still Teach Mark Twain in the Twenty-first-Century Indian Classroom
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