Thursday, January 19, 2012

Twain's Many Challenges to his Readers

After having read and analyzed several of Twain’s works, I have come to the conclusion that he enjoyed challenging the common and popular thoughts of people around him. Twain combines humor, sarcasm and, often, realism, to make points about the views and beliefs of his time. In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, we see Twain challenging several things, among them the common understanding of right and wrong. In Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences, Twain challenges the generally accepted view that Cooper’s works are spectacular pieces of literary art. In A True Story, the views of the old south are challenged through the story of a former slave and the hardships that she endured. We see similar challenges in Letters From the Earth, where Twain confronts the common beliefs of Christians by suggesting that the Christian God is Deistic as well as suggesting the possibility of Theistic Evolution, both religious concepts that were not popularly considered during his time.

By proposing the possibility of God having chosen to create the universe with “Atomatic Law,” Twain is challenging one of the most important aspect of the Christian religion, prayer. Christians believe in prayer having the power to move the hand of God. The belief is that lives can be changed by prayer and God’s mind can be changed. If God is a Deistic god, then prayer would be not only powerless, but a complete waste of time. There would be no point in praying to a God that cannot, or will not, hear you.

Twain also challenges the common Christian understanding of creation by suggesting that theistic evolution is the way that the heavens, earth and all the creatures on it where created. This concept tries to sync scientific views of evolution with the Christian belief in a creator by suggesting that the 6 days in which God created everything was actually “equivalent to a hundred million years, earthly time.” This time lapse would allow for evolution to take place at the guidance of God. This was not a popular view among Christians during this time and would certainly have stirred the pot if published at the time when Twain wrote it instead of 60 years later.

There are many other theological challenges to be analyzed within Letters From the Earth including the reasons behind God’s choice to create man, the creation of both good and evil character by God, the human ideas and views of heaven and hell, the many contradictions that present themselves in the bible and between the believers and their actions, the list goes on. It is a fabulous work that pushes people out of their comfort zones and challenges them to question the sanity of their own beliefs.

2 comments:

  1. I have not read a lot of Twain's work, but the works that I have read, he does seem to push the boundaries. I think you are right when you said that he likes to challenge the common beliefs of those around him. In Letters From the Earth he challenged a lot of different beliefs. I think the idea was to make one truly question what they believe and why they believe it. I also think that you were correct when you said that this would not have been a popular topic during the time that it was written and it probably isn't today either, because there are many who would read it and think that he was questioning religion. I like that he pushes topics, because it does get a person thinking about why they believe what they do.

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  2. I'd agree with you and Amy. This post shows just how frequently Twain pushed the boundaries of what the general public believed to be true.

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