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Posts by Center For Mark Twain Studies

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“Mark Twain was Broke”: Jeffrey Epstein’s Dismissive Opinion of Twain While slogging through the cesspool of the recently released Epstein files, I did a search for “Mark Twain” on a whim. To my surprise, the search garnered 130 results. After a perfunctory review, m…

"Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.” - Mark Twain

Dwayne Eutsey unearths an angry response to this quote in The Epstein Files.

1 month ago 12 2 0 0

Sullivan's essay is the best thing to come out of the Chernow biography's reception, at least so far, & Harper's was nice enough to offer me some space to say so.

8 months ago 10 2 1 0
Episode Summary of The American Vandal, A Tale of Today, Episode #20

Title: Literary Sociology a.k.a. The Institutional Turn a.k.a The Spreadsheet School of Literary Criticism

Description: A so-called Spreadsheet Man responds. Does the institutional turn have a distinctly feminine ethos? [27:30] How is it rooted in the Post45 Collective? [49:00] What are its debts to New Historicism and Marxist Literary Criticism? [69:00] And to Fredric Jameson? [84:30] And what has become of Economic Criticism? [94:00] 

Cast (in order of appearance): Dan Sinykin, Matt Seybold, Brandon Taylor, Rachel Sagner Buurma, Laura Heffernan, J. D. Connor, Alexander Manshel, Fredric Jameson, Leigh Claire La Berge 

Soundtrack: DownRiver Collective 

Narration: Nathan Osgood & SNR Audio 

For more about this episode, including a complete bibliography, please visit MarkTwainStudies.com/TheAmericanVandal/SpreadsheetMen, or subscribe to Matt Seybold's newsletter at TheAmericanVandal.substack.com

Episode Summary of The American Vandal, A Tale of Today, Episode #20 Title: Literary Sociology a.k.a. The Institutional Turn a.k.a The Spreadsheet School of Literary Criticism Description: A so-called Spreadsheet Man responds. Does the institutional turn have a distinctly feminine ethos? [27:30] How is it rooted in the Post45 Collective? [49:00] What are its debts to New Historicism and Marxist Literary Criticism? [69:00] And to Fredric Jameson? [84:30] And what has become of Economic Criticism? [94:00] Cast (in order of appearance): Dan Sinykin, Matt Seybold, Brandon Taylor, Rachel Sagner Buurma, Laura Heffernan, J. D. Connor, Alexander Manshel, Fredric Jameson, Leigh Claire La Berge Soundtrack: DownRiver Collective Narration: Nathan Osgood & SNR Audio For more about this episode, including a complete bibliography, please visit MarkTwainStudies.com/TheAmericanVandal/SpreadsheetMen, or subscribe to Matt Seybold's newsletter at TheAmericanVandal.substack.com

The eight months of baited breath ends tomorrow. Dan Sinykin (@dan-sinnamon.bsky.social) responds to Brandon Taylor (and my) critique of "The Spreadsheet Men."

9 months ago 26 8 3 2

I never knew an ignorant person yet but was prejudiced.

10 months ago 3 1 0 0
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AI does indeed get a lot wrong.

11 months ago 10 1 0 0
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Solidarity & Speculation (A Tale of Today, Episode #17) - Center for Mark Twain Studies Apple Podcasts Spotify The finale of our trilogy centered on Technofeudalism begins with the intersection of political economy with aesthetics and literary forms, followed by a synthesis of financial ...

"The business prosperity of the world is only a bubble of credit & speculation, one scheme helping to float another which is no better than it, & the whole liable to come to naught as soon as the busy brain that conceived them ceases its power to devise, or some accident produces a sudden panic."

11 months ago 6 1 1 0
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CMTS Announces the 2025 Class of Quarry Farm Fellows Join us in honoring the 2025 Quarry Farm Fellows!

Every year the Center For Mark Twain Studies funds at least a dozen Quarry Farm Fellows - including a creative writer, visual artist, & three (or more) emerging scholars - to spend 2-4 weeks in residence at the place which Twain found uniquely conducive to writing.

Excited for this year's class!

1 year ago 3 1 0 0
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Mark Twain. Born yesterday.

1 year ago 7 2 0 1
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John T. Lewis & Mark Twain: A Friendship “This wearer aggrandizes the watch, not the watch the wearer”

A good day to start skeeting with this excerpt from Robert Paul Lamb's forthcoming book, supplemented by documents from Bancroft and Houghton libraries.

2 years ago 12 1 1 0