Affiliation:
1. California State University, East Bay
Abstract
Abstract
This article will trace Mark Twain's early notes and letters to the Sacramento Union and Alta California during his four-month stay on the Hawaiian Island in 1866 and his subsequent trip down the Rio San Juan in Nicaragua later that year, considering his poetic meditations on a diversity of flora and fauna alongside his occasionally direct and sometimes elusive commentaries on territorial annexation, missionization, and settler occupation in the Pacific and beyond. Reading across a colonial archive of nineteenth-century environmental surveys of the Pacific atolls and the Central American isthmus, this article will highlight Twain's alignment toward and departure from a tradition of writing about non-European ecologies as bound within the exotic picturesque. Twain's ambivalent, non-Western ecologies mark a politics that extends well beyond his familiar satires and pointed expositions, offering pathways for reimagining the place of nonhuman environments throughout his subsequent literary canon.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory