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“Away From Home and Amongst Strangers”: Domestic Sphere, Public Arena, and Huckleberry Finn
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
Extract
Despite Mark Twain's situating the story “forty to fifty years ago” and in a rural river valley, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn closely engaged daily dilemmas and concerns of a Northern, urban, middle-class audience. As Carolyn Porter has argued, the familiar comprehension of American fiction as fantasies of escape from society and history, as authorial efforts to light out for the territory, needs to be dislodged by a sensitivity to such writings as acute responses to their immediate context – a developing industrial and capitalist society and culture. Although Huck's world may appear cut off from the landscape and society of bourgeois city dwellers of the 1880s, and although there are not explicit references to industrialization or urbanization, the novel reproduces and addresses new features of daily life, alterations and stresses in private and public behavior and interaction that were being precipitated by the accelerated economic and demographic changes of the late 19th Century.
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References
NOTES
1. Porter, Carolyn, Seeing and Being: The Plight of the Participant Observer in Emerson, James, Adams, and Faulkner (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1981).Google Scholar
2. Although focusing on life in Paris, Walter Benjamin wrote that, during the early 19th Century, “the private citizen was born” and “for the first time the living space became distinguished from the space of work.” See Charles Baudelaire (London: New Left Books, 1973), p. 167Google Scholar. Also see Zaretsky, Eli, Capitalism, the Family, and Personal Life (New York: Harper and Row, 1976)Google Scholar, passim; and Gadlin, Howard, “Private Lives and Public Order: A Critical View of the History of Intimate Relations in the United States,” Massachusetts Review 17 (1976): 306.Google Scholar
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