Abstract

AbstractThis paper examines Mark Twain's anti-Arab sentiments and the way they complicate his recent accommodation to transnational American studies. The dehumanization of Arabs in Twain's The Innocents Abroad, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and Tom Sawyer Abroad shows the limits of tolerance in America's most loved novelist but also offers an opportunity to engage the asperities of the American academic tradition that wrestles with the great responsibility of cultural dialogue.

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