Friday, July 19, 2019
Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs Court as a Dystopian Work Essay
Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court as a Dystopian  Work     à     à  Ã    For years, Mark Twain's "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" has been  primarily viewed as a work of simple satire. Twain, desiring to poke fun at a  group of America's cultural critics, chief among them Matthew Arnold, who  claimed that cultural life in the U.S. treaded on shallow soil, takes aim at the  venerated institutions of Britain. The author attempts to show that his  country's lack of romanticized social structures, meaning an absence of royalty,  the Catholic church, and long-dead knights and princesses, was far from a  cultural weakness. Twain explodes the myth around idealized chivalric society  and proves it to be no match for the Nineteenth Century man.      à       The book follows Twain's protagonist Hank Morgan, a  pragmatist and the author's model of self-made, turn-of-the-century  industrialist, through a time travel jump that lands him in Sixth Century  England, specifically at the fabled Camelot. Here Hank, through ingenuity and  entrepreneurial vigor, quickly ascends to the top of the socio-political  structure of King Arthur's Court. What's more, Twain takes great pains in  ridiculing both the role of the church in England and the ignoble position and  lack of intelligence of the ruling royalty. He also pokes fun at the  romanticizing of English culture during this period by illustrating the  prostrate and dependent nature of the British aristocratic system -- a system  void of democratic mechanism.      à       As a work of social satire, the beginning of the novel is  fairly successful. At the outset of the work, Twain accomplishes what must have  been his original task.      à       "The opening chapters, the direct attack, the...              ...mbolic of American innocence  and the Morgan and his machines of destruction as symbols of capitalism and  industrialization, the novel becomes not chaotic literary failure, but dystopian  science fiction popularized in the Twentieth Century. Where Huxley and others  predicted enslavement to technology, Twain asserts that innocence and naivetà ©  have no place in and will be wiped out by modern society. His final analysis is  that they cannot coexist.      à       Works Cited     Bellamy, Gladys Carmen. Mark Twain as a Literary Artist.  Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1950.     à  DeVoto, Benard. Mark Twain's America. Boston:  Little, Brown, and Company, 1935.      Twain, Mark. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court.  New York: P.F. Collier and Son Company, 1889. Wagenknecht, Edward. Mark Twain:  The Man and His Work. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1935.                        
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