The gilded age
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The gilded age
(The Oxford Mark Twain / Shelley Fisher Fishkin, editor)
Oxford University Press, 1996
- : trade ed
- : lib. ed
Available at / 68 libraries
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Kobe Shoin Women's University Library / Kobe Shoin Women's College Library
: trade edA938.62||1071529
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Note
Reprint. Originally published: Hartford, Conn. : American Publishing Company, 1873
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Gilded Age, by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner, is a political roman a clef--a direct and caustic attack on government, politicians, and big business in Post-Civil War America. It is the book that gave an era its name. Published in 1873, the first year of the second scandal-ridden Grant administration, it is the first novel of consequence about Washington in all of American writing, as Ward Just notes in his Introduction. The Gilded Age "gives Washington the aspect of a clumsy frontier town of ludicrous aspirations, populated mainly by fools, racketeers, opportunists, and parvenus, most of them members of the United States Congress," Just writes. The Gilded Age trains its satire on corruption in politics, business and the courts; "As Twain famously said, there is no distinctly native American criminal class except Congress, and the great triumph of The Gilded Age is that we are given chapter and verse on how the thievery is done." Just notes that readers will see for themselves whether Twain and Warner's subtitle for The Gilded Age--"A Tale of To-Day"--is still accurate."
by "Nielsen BookData"