Authors
Stephanie LeMenager
Publication date
2004
Journal
ELH
Volume
71
Issue
2
Pages
405-431
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Description
In the antebellum slave market that was rigorously conducted on and along the Mississippi River, Mark Twain recognized a fundamental plot that he found still visible in his own post-frontier United States, where the promise of a free, unbounded space of nationalist imagining had finally dried up. The fundamental national plot Twain noted in the antebellum Mississippi’s volatile market culture involved selling something that does not belong to you, the misappropriation of others’ labor and sentience. Since the late eighteenth century, the river had been a primary conductor of commercial traffic, carrying, among more innocent commodities, slaves and slave-grown cotton. Imagining the great river highway, Twain identified our American pleasure with a commercial imperialism which perpetuated the piracy and slaving that had characterized the era of mercantile capitalism; in his Mississippi River fictions, he reproduces …
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