The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Morality and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
- Huck Acts, an Escape from Sivilization
- Attraction and Repulsion: Huck Finn ‘Nigger’ Jim, and Black Americans
- Sentimental Liberalism and the Problem of Race in Huckleberry Finn
- Mark Twain's Moveable Farm and the Evasion
- Samuel Clemens and the Ghost of Shakespeare
- The Charmed Circie
- Say It Ain't So, Huck: Second Thoughts on Mark Twain's ‘Masterpiece’
- The River and the Road: Fashions in Forgiveness
- Nationalism and Hypercanonization
- The Ethnicity of Huck Finn—and the Difference It Makes
- Whah Is de Glory?: The (Un)Reconstructed South
- Huck the Thief
- Huck and Jim on the Mississippi: Going with the Flow?
- Huckleberry Finn; or, Consequences
- Twain and the Garden of the World: Cultural Consolidation on the American Frontier
- Huckleberry Finn and the Problem of Freedom
- Say It, Jim: The Morality of Connection in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
- Further Reading