2018
DOI: 10.5325/marktwaij.16.1.0077
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A Populist in King Arthur's Court

Abstract: Connecticut Yankee stands as one of Twain's most overtly political novels. Critics have read its protagonist, Hank Morgan, as anything from a progressive reformer to an authoritarian oppressor. This article attempts to explain some of Hank's contradictions by reading him as a populist in two intersecting ways. First, he serves as a figure for the workingman that was valorized by the late nineteenth-century People's Party. Second, his rhetoric suggests the lowercase-p populism that splits the political sphere i… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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