“…The shifting, opposite perspectives from which Twain's autobiographical narrator views Venice have been examined as “cognate with thematic oppositions between romance and realism, the ‘literary’ and the ‘vernacular’ styles, ‘pilgrims’ and ‘sinners,’ Europe and America, and, by extension, with a whole world of highly polarized cultural—social, political, religious—values” (Robinson 48). Nonetheless, these oxymora do not simply reflect narrative and thematic contradictions, but rather illustrate Twain's authorial considerations.…”