Browsing by Author "Griffin, Edward"
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Item Interview with Edward Griffin(University of Minnesota, 1994-12-28) Griffin, Edward; Chambers, Clarke A.Clarke A. Chambers interviews Edward Griffin, professor for the departments of English and American Studies.Item Jim's Secrets: What Mark Twain Knew But Huck Finn Didn't(Journal of Opinions, Ideas & Essays (JOIE), 2013-08) Griffin, EdwardMark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, persistently attacked since 1885 as vulgar and inelegant, has more recently been condemned as elitist, sexist, and racist. The charge of racism turns not only on the pervasive use of the “n” word, but also on a misunderstanding of Jim, the runaway slave, as a minstrel-show stereotype of the powerless simpleton. Urging a reconsideration of Jim’s role in light of the literary and psychological features of the captivity narrative, this essay argues that Mark Twain builds the novel around two related forms of captivity: Jim’s slavery in the first part of the novel and, in the second part, the joint captivity of Jim and Huck by the Duke and the King. The first half turns on two competing plans: Huck’s and Jim’s. Huck’s is a juvenile plan, open-ended and in search of thrilling adventures. Jim’s is an adult plan with specific ends in view: escaping from from slavery at the risk of his life and eventually freeing his wife and children. Huck Finn would like to diminish Jim’s manhood, but Mark Twain will not allow it. And when Mark Twain realizes that if he defeats Jim’s plan he will be writing a tragedy, he searches for a comic ending--with the ostensibly insuperable difficulties resolved--by turning to parody and by using all the trappings of the traditional captivity narrative for social satire until, when all seems lost, by supplying Tom Sawyer to provide a deeply ambiguous tragi-comic rescue. The final section of the essay provides a brief meditation on that ambiguous resolution.Item On The Poems of the Accidental Environmental Activist(Journal of Opinions, Ideas & Essays (JOIE), 2015-10-01) Griffin, EdwardThis essay offers a commentary on the four poems of Dr. Eville Gorham that accompany his memoir, “Reflecting on Life in a Deteriorating World: How Chance Made Me an Environmental Activist,” published elsewhere in this journal. Gorham’s poems are read here not only as complementing his development as a scientist but also for their literary merit as intriguing applications of a scientific perspective to nature poetry, one of the great traditions of the American and English lyric. His poems are associated here with the spare, imagistic mode of 20th-century modernism, particularly as defined by Ezra Pound and his followers, but also with the skeptical philosophical mode associated with such modernists as Wallace Stevens.