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From Illustrations in German Translations of Mark Twain's Works

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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Kemble, Edward W. Pudd'nhead Wilson abstract example notes example">
 
   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "Illustrating _Pudd&#x27;nhead_." unknown. <a href="https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/wilson/pwillshp.html" target="_blank">https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/wilson/pwillshp.html</a>.</h3>
 
 
 
 
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="mark_twain the_adventures_of_tom_sawyer book_illustrations">
   <h3>Gannon, Susan R., and Clark, Beverly Lyon. "&#x27;200 Rattling Pictures&#x27;: True Williams and the Imagetext of the First American Edition of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer". 2007.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson</span>
     <span class="tag">The Adventures of Tom Sawyer</span>
     <span class="tag">abstract example</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
    <span class="tag">notes example</span>
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     <p>this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract</p>
     <p>No abstract available.</p>
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     <p>this is a test note</p>
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   <h3>Gneiting, Teona Tone. <i>The Pencil&#x27;s Role in &quot;Vanity Fair&quot;</i>. <i>Huntington Library Quarterly</i>. 1976. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/2737771" target="_blank">https://www.jstor.org/stable/2737771</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn caricatures_and_cartoons kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Wonham, Henry B., and Wonham, Henry B.. "&#x27;I Want a Real Coon&#x27;: Twain and Ethnic Caricature". 2004.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
      
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Caricatures and cartoons</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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     <p>Not directly relevant for illustrations in MarK Twain’s work</p>
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   <h3>Sollors, Werner, and Brennan, Jonathan. <i>Was Roxy black? Race as stereotype in Mark Twain, Edward Windsor Kemble and Paul Laurence Dunbar</i>. 2002. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Newell, Kate. <i>&#x27;You don&#x27;t know about me without you have read a book&#x27;: Authenticity in Adaptations of &#x27;Adventures of Huckleberry Finn&#x27;</i>. <i>Literature/Film Quarterly</i>. 2013.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
      
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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   <h3>Schmidt, Barbara. "Mark Twain Uniform Editions--Ch 17--Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson." unknown. <a href="http://www.twainquotes.com/UniformEds/UniformEdsCh17.html" target="_blank">http://www.twainquotes.com/UniformEds/UniformEdsCh17.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="kemble_edward_w illustrations">
   <h3>Holt, Elvin. <i>A Coon Alphabet and the Comic Mask of Racial Prejudice</i>. <i>Studies in American Humor</i>. 1986.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
      
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">illustrations</span>
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     <p>&lt;strong&gt;Edward Windsor Kemble, Illustrator&lt;/strong&gt;
     <p></p>
&lt;strong&gt;Edward Windsor Kemble&lt;/strong&gt; (b. 1861 - d. 1933) &lt;br&gt;was born in Sacramento, California, the son of Edward Cleveland Kemble who founded the &lt;em&gt;San Francisco Alta California&lt;/em&gt;. His first attempts at drawing were those of Indians drawn when he was about eleven years old and traveling with his father throughout the West. In the winter of 1880-1881 he attended class in New York at the Art Students&#x27; League. After that brief stint, Kemble became largely self-taught and obtained a job as a cartoonist at New York&#x27;s &lt;em&gt;Daily Graphic&lt;/em&gt;. When &lt;em&gt;Life &lt;/em&gt;magazine was founded in 1883 he became a contributor to that publication. When Clemens saw some of his Negro drawings in &lt;em&gt;Life&lt;/em&gt; magazine, he recruited him to illustrate the first edition of &lt;em&gt;Huckleberry Finn&lt;/em&gt;. After the success of &lt;em&gt;Huckleberry Finn&lt;/em&gt;, &lt;em&gt;Century&lt;/em&gt; magazine made him an offer for all of his work outside of book publications. He remained with &lt;em&gt;Century&lt;/em&gt; until 1891. Kemble died in 1933 with a lengthy list of book illustration work to his credit.
In a letter from Kemble to Frank Bliss dated May 16, 1898, Kemble told Bliss he would be happy to join the &quot;goodly company&quot; of artists and provide illustrations for &quot;a volume of Mark Twain.&quot; Bliss had also awarded Kemble the illustrating assignment for the 1899 edition of &lt;em&gt;Adventures of Huckleberry Finn&lt;/em&gt;. For &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson and Those Extraordinary Twins&lt;/em&gt;, Kemble provided six new full-page pictures to illustrate the &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson&lt;/em&gt; chapters of the book.
One of Kemble&#x27;s illustrations titled &quot;Buckstone Training with the Rum Party&quot; was hand-colored and used as the frontispiece for the 1901 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/UniformEds/UniformEdsCh4-f.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Riverdale Edition&lt;/a&gt;.
Kemble&#x27;s previous style of depicting black people as unattractive caricatures was unchanged throughout &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson&lt;/em&gt;. His drawings of the central character Roxy, who was only 1/16 black, depict a less attractive woman than the illustrations of her by &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/Roxy.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Louis Loeb which had appeared in the &lt;/a&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/Roxy.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Century Magazine&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt; serialization. Kemble&#x27;s image would be the one presented to the greatest number of American readers for years to come and one illustration in particular became the source of scholarly misidentification and misinterpretation.
The 1899 edition of &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson&lt;/em&gt; features two illustrations of Roxy, both in the company of blacks. In 1901 American Publishing Company authorized the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/UniformEds/UniformEdsCh4-e.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Underwood Edition&lt;/a&gt; which contained fewer illustrations. Only one illustration of Roxy was used and it was featured prominently as a frontispiece. The decision to present the below illustration as the first one a reader would see was repeated by Harper and Brothers in subsequent uniform editions. It has been a source of misunderstanding for critics who were not adept at reading the picture and who never had an opportunity to see Kemble&#x27;s other illustration of Roxy.One of the most prominent Mark Twain scholars to criticize Kemble for misinterpretating Mark Twain&#x27;s work was Leslie Fiedler. In Fiedler&#x27;s review titled &quot;As Free as Any Cretur...&quot; published in &lt;em&gt;The New Republic&lt;/em&gt; in August 1955 he wrote that the image of Roxy that Twain created was &quot;a portrait so complex and unforeseen that the baffled illustrator for the authorized standard edition chose to ignore it completely, drawing in the place of a &#x27;majestic...rosy...comely&#x27; Roxana--a gross and comic Aunt Jemima.&quot;
In 1987 Martha Banta followed Fiedler&#x27;s lead in her work &lt;em&gt;Imaging American Women: Idea and Ideals in Cultural History &lt;/em&gt;writing:
Kemble did not draw the Roxy Mark Twain portrays. He set down the accepted fictions, &quot;the orthodox opinions,&quot; governing turn-of-the-century identification of inferior racial types. A stroke of Kemble&#x27;s pen wipes out the verbal irony by which Mark Twain set up cross-currents among what Roxy looks like, her bottom-nature, and the racial tag placed upon her by society (Banta, p. 182).
One of the most cogent discussions of the Kemble misinterpretations is by Werner Sollors in his essay &quot;Was Roxy Black?&quot; published in &lt;em&gt;Mixed Race Literature&lt;/em&gt; (2002), edited by Jonathan Brennan. Sollors suggests that Kemble may have &quot;hidden&quot; Roxy in &quot;Harvesting Among the Kitchens&quot; as a conscious way of honoring Mark Twain&#x27;s sentence &quot;From Roxy&#x27;s manner of speech, a stranger would have expected her to be black, but she was not&quot; (Brennan, p. 82). As a result of publishing decisions to cut illustrations, a number of readers have been guilty of their own hasty stereotyping when glancing at the Kemble frontispiece. No evidence has been found that Mark Twain commented on the usage of &quot;Roxy Harvesting Among the Kitchens&quot; as a frontispiece for the Underwood or subsequent Harper editions. The ensuing controversy the illustration caused is one that he would likely have enjoyed.
Further discussion of Kemble&#x27;s illustrations is available online at the University of Virginia website in an article titled &quot;&lt;a href=&quot;http://etext.virginia.edu/railton/wilson/pwillshp.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Illustrating Pudd&#x27;nhead&lt;/a&gt;.&quot;
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   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "The evasion will be illustrated." unknown. <a href="https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/huckfinn/HFEvasionIllus.html" target="_blank">https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/huckfinn/HFEvasionIllus.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Sonstegard, Adam. <i>Artistic liberty and slave imagery: ‘Mark Twain&#x27;s illustrator,&#x27; E. W. Kemble, turns to Harriet Beecher Stowe</i>. <i>Nineteenth-Century Literature</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
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     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "Representing Jim, 1885-1985." unknown. <a href="https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/huckfinn/jiminpix.html" target="_blank">https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/huckfinn/jiminpix.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="authorship collaboration">
   <h3>Leonard, James S. et al.. <i>Author-ity and textuality: current views of collaborative writing</i>. 1994.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
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     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Authorship</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Collaboration</span>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W.">
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   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "Illustrating Huckleberry Finn: E. W. Kemble." unknown. <a href="https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/huckfinn/hucillhp.html" target="_blank">https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/huckfinn/hucillhp.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Pereira, Nilce M.. <i>Book illustration as (intersemiotic) translation: pictures translating words</i>. <i>Meta</i>. 2008.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
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     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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     <p>Mark Twain in His Times Project. Accessed 19 February 2026.</p>
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   <h3>unknown. "Illustrating Pudd&#x27;nhead." unknown. <a href="https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/wilson/pwillshp.html" target="_blank">https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/wilson/pwillshp.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Kinghorn, Norton D.. <i>E. W. Kemble&#x27;s Misplaced Modifier: A Note on the Illustrations for &#x27;Huckleberry Finn&#x27;</i>. <i>Mark Twain Journal</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
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     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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   <h3>unknown. "Illustrating Pudd&#x27;nhead." unknown. <a href="https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/wilson/pwillshp.html" target="_blank">https://twain.lib.virginia.edu/wilson/pwillshp.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="kemble_edward_w puddnhead_wilson abstract_example notes_example">
   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "Illustrating <em>Pudd&#x27;nhead</em>".</h3>


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     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson</span>
    <span class="tag">abstract example</span>
    <span class="tag">notes example</span>
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   <h3>David, Beverly R., and Leonard, Tames S.. <i>The relationship of Kemble’s illustrations to Mark Twain’s text: using pictures to teach Huck Finn</i>. 1999. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv111jjk2.18" target="_blank">https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv111jjk2.18</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w">
   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "Illustrating Huckleberry Finn: E. W. Kemble". <i>Illustrating Huck Homepage</i>.</h3>


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     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
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     <p>Mark Twain in His Times Project. Accessed 19 February 2026.</p>
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   <h3>Wonham, Henry B., and Wonham, Henry B.. <i>&#x27;I Want a Real Coon&#x27;: Twain and Ethnic Caricature</i>. 2004. </h3>
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   <h3>unknown. "Illustrating Pudd&#x27;nhead".</h3>


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    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
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   <h3>Newell, Kate. <i>&#x27;You don&#x27;t know about me without you have read a book&#x27;: Authenticity in Adaptations of &#x27;Adventures of Huckleberry Finn&#x27;</i>. <i>Literature/Film Quarterly</i>. 2013. </h3>
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   <h3>unknown. "Illustrating Pudd&#x27;nhead".</h3>


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     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
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    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
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   <h3>Martin, Francis, Jr.. <i>To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art</i>. <i>The Journal of Popular Culture</i>. 2007. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="mark_twain roughing_it book_illustrations">
   <h3>Dumas, Frédéric. <i>Illustration and Imagination: Mark Twain’s Roughing It and John Gast’s American Progress</i>. <i>ILCEA [Revue de l’Institut des langues et cultures d&#x27;Europe, Amérique, Afrique, Asie et Australie]</i>. 2021.</h3>


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    <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">Roughing It</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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   <h3>Kinghorn, Norton D.. <i>E. W. Kemble&#x27;s Misplaced Modifier: A Note on the Illustrations for &#x27;Huckleberry Finn&#x27;</i>. <i>Mark Twain Journal</i>. 1973. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/41640965" target="_blank">https://www.jstor.org/stable/41640965</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w">
   <h3>Teutsch, Matthew. "Illustrations in “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”". <i>Interminable Rambling</i>.</h3>


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     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Caricatures and cartoons Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
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   <h3>Wonham, Henry B.. <i>Playing the races: ethnic caricature and American literary realism</i>. 2004. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Barclay, Donald A.. <i>Interpreted Well Enough: Two Illustrators&#x27; Visions of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</i>. <i>Horn Book Magazine</i>. 1992.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Caricatures and cartoons</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>Introduction: the age of caricature, the age of realism -- William Dean Howells and the touch of exaggeration which typifies -- &quot;I want a real coon&quot;: Twain and ethnic caricature -- A Jamesian art to be cultivated -- Edith Wharton&#x27;s flamboyant copy -- The &quot;curious realism&quot; of Charles Chesnutt</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W.">
<!-- 16 -->
   <h3>Teutsch, Matthew. "Illustrations in “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”." unknown. <a href="https://interminablerambling.com/2018/10/18/10351/" target="_blank">https://interminablerambling.com/2018/10/18/10351/</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Briden, Earl F.. <i>Kemble&#x27;s &#x27;Specialty&#x27; and the Pictorial Countertext of Huckleberry Finn</i>. <i>Mark Twain Journal</i>. 1988.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 17 -->
   <h3>Sonstegard, Adam. <i>Artistic liberty and slave imagery: ‘Mark Twain&#x27;s illustrator,&#x27; E. W. Kemble, turns to Harriet Beecher Stowe</i>. <i>Nineteenth-Century Literature</i>. 2009. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2009.63.4.499" target="_blank">http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2009.63.4.499</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="a_connecticut_yankee_in_king_arthurs_court mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Inge, M. Thomas et al.. "Mark Twain and Dan Beard&#x27;s Collaborative Connecticut Yankee". 1994.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur&#x27;s Court</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 18 -->
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>Mark Twain and the Legends for &quot;Huckleberry Finn&quot;</i>. <i>American Literary Realism</i>. 1982. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/27746050" target="_blank">https://www.jstor.org/stable/27746050</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="book_illustrations">
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>Mark Twain and his illustrators</i>. 1986.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
    <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Kemble, Edward W.">
<!-- 19 -->
   <h3>David, Berverly R., et al.. <i>Reading the illustrations in Huckleberry Finn</i>. 1996. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="book_illustrations">
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>Mark Twain and his illustrators</i>. 2001.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>Scholarly material added to the back of the novel; separate pagination from the main text</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 20 -->
   <h3>Barclay, Donald A.. <i>Interpreted Well Enough: Two Illustrators&#x27; Visions of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</i>. <i>Horn Book Magazine</i>. 1992. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>Mark Twain and the Legends for &quot;Huckleberry Finn&quot;</i>. <i>American Literary Realism</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
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     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W.">
<!-- 21 -->
   <h3>Anderson, Douglas. <i>Reading the Pictures of Huckleberry Finn</i>. <i>Arizona Quarterly</i>. 1986. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="untagged">
   <h3>Schmidt, Barbara. "Mark Twain Uniform Editions--Ch 17--Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson". <i>Twainquotes.com</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">untagged</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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     <p>Source: Bibliography in Francis Martin, J R ., “To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art”</p>
     <p>&lt;strong&gt;Edward Windsor Kemble, Illustrator&lt;/strong&gt;
 
&lt;table&gt;
&lt;tbody&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;
&lt;td&gt;
&lt;strong&gt;Edward Windsor Kemble&lt;/strong&gt; (b. 1861 - d. 1933) &lt;br&gt;was born in Sacramento, California, the son of Edward Cleveland Kemble who founded the &lt;em&gt;San Francisco Alta California&lt;/em&gt;. His first attempts at drawing were those of Indians drawn when he was about eleven years old and traveling with his father throughout the West. In the winter of 1880-1881 he attended class in New York at the Art Students&#x27; League. After that brief stint, Kemble became largely self-taught and obtained a job as a cartoonist at New York&#x27;s &lt;em&gt;Daily Graphic&lt;/em&gt;. When &lt;em&gt;Life &lt;/em&gt;magazine was founded in 1883 he became a contributor to that publication. When Clemens saw some of his Negro drawings in &lt;em&gt;Life&lt;/em&gt; magazine, he recruited him to illustrate the first edition of &lt;em&gt;Huckleberry Finn&lt;/em&gt;. After the success of &lt;em&gt;Huckleberry Finn&lt;/em&gt;, &lt;em&gt;Century&lt;/em&gt; magazine made him an offer for all of his work outside of book publications. He remained with &lt;em&gt;Century&lt;/em&gt; until 1891. Kemble died in 1933 with a lengthy list of book illustration work to his credit.
 
In a letter from Kemble to Frank Bliss dated May 16, 1898, Kemble told Bliss he would be happy to join the &quot;goodly company&quot; of artists and provide illustrations for &quot;a volume of Mark Twain.&quot; Bliss had also awarded Kemble the illustrating assignment for the 1899 edition of &lt;em&gt;Adventures of Huckleberry Finn&lt;/em&gt;. For &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson and Those Extraordinary Twins&lt;/em&gt;, Kemble provided six new full-page pictures to illustrate the &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson&lt;/em&gt; chapters of the book.
 
One of Kemble&#x27;s illustrations titled &quot;Buckstone Training with the Rum Party&quot; was hand-colored and used as the frontispiece for the 1901 &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/UniformEds/UniformEdsCh4-f.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Riverdale Edition&lt;/a&gt;.
 
&lt;/td&gt;
&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;/tbody&gt;
&lt;/table&gt;
Kemble&#x27;s previous style of depicting black people as unattractive caricatures was unchanged throughout &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson&lt;/em&gt;. His drawings of the central character Roxy, who was only 1/16 black, depict a less attractive woman than the illustrations of her by &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/Roxy.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Louis Loeb which had appeared in the &lt;/a&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/Roxy.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Century Magazine&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/em&gt; serialization. Kemble&#x27;s image would be the one presented to the greatest number of American readers for years to come and one illustration in particular became the source of scholarly misidentification and misinterpretation.
 
The 1899 edition of &lt;em&gt;Pudd&#x27;nhead Wilson&lt;/em&gt; features two illustrations of Roxy, both in the company of blacks. In 1901 American Publishing Company authorized the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.twainquotes.com/UniformEds/UniformEdsCh4-e.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Underwood Edition&lt;/a&gt; which contained fewer illustrations. Only one illustration of Roxy was used and it was featured prominently as a frontispiece. The decision to present the below illustration as the first one a reader would see was repeated by Harper and Brothers in subsequent uniform editions. It has been a source of misunderstanding for critics who were not adept at reading the picture and who never had an opportunity to see Kemble&#x27;s other illustration of Roxy.One of the most prominent Mark Twain scholars to criticize Kemble for misinterpretating Mark Twain&#x27;s work was Leslie Fiedler. In Fiedler&#x27;s review titled &quot;As Free as Any Cretur...&quot; published in &lt;em&gt;The New Republic&lt;/em&gt; in August 1955 he wrote that the image of Roxy that Twain created was &quot;a portrait so complex and unforeseen that the baffled illustrator for the authorized standard edition chose to ignore it completely, drawing in the place of a &#x27;majestic...rosy...comely&#x27; Roxana--a gross and comic Aunt Jemima.&quot;
 
In 1987 Martha Banta followed Fiedler&#x27;s lead in her work &lt;em&gt;Imaging American Women: Idea and Ideals in Cultural History &lt;/em&gt;writing:
 
&lt;blockquote&gt;
Kemble did not draw the Roxy Mark Twain portrays. He set down the accepted fictions, &quot;the orthodox opinions,&quot; governing turn-of-the-century identification of inferior racial types. A stroke of Kemble&#x27;s pen wipes out the verbal irony by which Mark Twain set up cross-currents among what Roxy looks like, her bottom-nature, and the racial tag placed upon her by society (Banta, p. 182).
 
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
One of the most cogent discussions of the Kemble misinterpretations is by Werner Sollors in his essay &quot;Was Roxy Black?&quot; published in &lt;em&gt;Mixed Race Literature&lt;/em&gt; (2002), edited by Jonathan Brennan. Sollors suggests that Kemble may have &quot;hidden&quot; Roxy in &quot;Harvesting Among the Kitchens&quot; as a conscious way of honoring Mark Twain&#x27;s sentence &quot;From Roxy&#x27;s manner of speech, a stranger would have expected her to be black, but she was not&quot; (Brennan, p. 82). As a result of publishing decisions to cut illustrations, a number of readers have been guilty of their own hasty stereotyping when glancing at the Kemble frontispiece. No evidence has been found that Mark Twain commented on the usage of &quot;Roxy Harvesting Among the Kitchens&quot; as a frontispiece for the Underwood or subsequent Harper editions. The ensuing controversy the illustration caused is one that he would likely have enjoyed.
 
Further discussion of Kemble&#x27;s illustrations is available online at the University of Virginia website in an article titled &quot;&lt;a href=&quot;http://etext.virginia.edu/railton/wilson/pwillshp.html&quot; rel=&quot;noopener noreferrer nofollow&quot;&gt;Illustrating Pudd&#x27;nhead&lt;/a&gt;.&quot;</p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 22 -->
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>The Pictorial Huck Finn: Mark Twain and His Illustrator, E. W. Kemble</i>. <i>American Quarterly</i>. 1974. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn caricatures_and_cartoons kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Wonham, Henry B.. <i>Playing the races: ethnic caricature and American literary realism</i>. 2004.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Caricatures and cartoons</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p>Introduction: the age of caricature, the age of realism -- William Dean Howells and the touch of exaggeration which typifies -- &quot;I want a real coon&quot;: Twain and ethnic caricature -- A Jamesian art to be cultivated -- Edith Wharton&#x27;s flamboyant copy -- The &quot;curious realism&quot; of Charles Chesnutt</p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 23 -->
   <h3>Briden, Earl F.. <i>Kemble&#x27;s &#x27;Specialty&#x27; and the Pictorial Countertext of Huckleberry Finn</i>. <i>Mark Twain Journal</i>. 1988. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="kemble_edward_w">
   <h3>David, Berverly R. et al.. "Reading the illustrations in Huckleberry Finn". 1996.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
    <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p>Scholarly material added to the back of the novel; separate pagination from the main text</p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 24 -->
   <h3>Anspaugh, Kelly. <i>The Innocent Eye? E. W. Kemble&#x27;s Illustrations to &#x27;Adventures of Huckleberry Finn&#x27;</i>. <i>American Literary Realism</i>. 1993. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/27746526" target="_blank">https://www.jstor.org/stable/27746526</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w">
   <h3>Anderson, Douglas. <i>Reading the Pictures of Huckleberry Finn</i>. <i>Arizona Quarterly</i>. 1986.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p>Source: Bibliography in Francis Martin, J R ., “To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art”</p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<!-- 25 -->
   <h3>Holt, Elvin. <i>A Coon Alphabet and the Comic Mask of Racial Prejudice</i>. <i>Studies in American Humor</i>. 1986. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w">
   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "Representing Jim, 1885-1985". <i>Illustrating Huck Homepage</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
    <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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     <p>No notes available.</p>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="The Adventures of Tom Sawyer">
<!-- 26 -->
   <h3>Clark, Beverly Lyon. <i>The adventures of Tom Sawyer: authoritative text, backgrounds and contexts, criticism</i>. 2007. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn">
   <h3>Martin, Adam. "See Edward Ardizzone&#x27;s Lost &#x27;Huck Finn&#x27; Illustrations". <i>The Atlantic</i>. 2011.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">The Adventures of Tom Sawyer</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
   </div>
   </div>
  <p class="short-abstract">Drawings done by the English artist in 1970 were found in a publisher&#x27;s desk</p>


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     <p>Drawings done by the English artist in 1970 were found in a publisher&#x27;s desk</p>
   </div>
   </div>


   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>Includes bibliographical references</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn">
<!-- 27 -->
   <h3>Martin, Adam. "See Edward Ardizzone&#x27;s Lost &#x27;Huck Finn&#x27; Illustrations." 2011. <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2011/05/see-lost-huck-finn-illustrations-edward-ardizzone/350604/" target="_blank">https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2011/05/see-lost-huck-finn-illustrations-edward-ardizzone/350604/</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="a_connecticut_yankee_in_king_arthurs_court mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Nölle-Fischer, Karen. <i>Selling Mark Twain’s Connecticut Yankee in America: Marketing and Illustrations</i>. <i>Revue française d’études américaines</i>. 1983.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur&#x27;s Court</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="abstract hidden">
     <p>Drawings done by the English artist in 1970 were found in a publisher&#x27;s desk</p>
     <p>No abstract available.</p>
   </div>
   </div>


   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 28 -->
   <h3>Pereira, Nilce M.. <i>Book illustration as (intersemiotic) translation: pictures translating words</i>. <i>Meta</i>. 2008. <a href="http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/017977ar" target="_blank">http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/017977ar</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="the_adventures_of_tom_sawyer">
   <h3>Clark, Beverly Lyon. <i>The adventures of Tom Sawyer: authoritative text, backgrounds and contexts, criticism</i>. 2007.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">The Adventures of Tom Sawyer</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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     <p>Includes bibliographical references</p>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="untagged">
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="untagged">
   <h3>Boime, Albert. <i>The Art of Exclusion: Representing Blacks in the Nineteenth Century</i>. 1990. </h3>
   <h3>Boime, Albert. <i>The Art of Exclusion: Representing Blacks in the Nineteenth Century</i>. 1990.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
      
     <span class="tag">untagged</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>Source: Bibliography in Francis Martin, Jr., &amp;quot;To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art&amp;quot;</p>
     <p>Source: Bibliography in Francis Martin, Jr., &quot;To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art&quot;</p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court Mark Twain book illustrations">
<!-- 30 -->
   <h3>Nölle-Fischer, Karen. <i>Selling Mark Twain’s Connecticut Yankee in America: Marketing and Illustrations</i>. <i>Revue française d’études américaines</i>. 1983. <a href="https://www.persee.fr/doc/rfea_0397-7870_1983_num_17_1_1131" target="_blank">https://www.persee.fr/doc/rfea_0397-7870_1983_num_17_1_1131</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="untagged">
   <h3>Railton, Stephen. "The evasion will be illustrated". <i>Illustrating Huck Homepage</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur&#x27;s Court</span>
     <span class="tag">untagged</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Authorship Collaboration">
<!-- 31 -->
   <h3>Leonard, James S., et al.. <i>Author-ity and textuality: current views of collaborative writing</i>. 1994. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Anspaugh, Kelly. <i>The Innocent Eye? E. W. Kemble&#x27;s Illustrations to &#x27;Adventures of Huckleberry Finn&#x27;</i>. <i>American Literary Realism</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Authorship</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
     <span class="tag">Collaboration</span>
     <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
    <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
   </div>
   </div>
 


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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p></p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Mark Twain The Adventures of Tom Sawyer book illustrations">
<!-- 32 -->
   <h3>Gannon, Susan R., and Clark, Beverly Lyon. <i>&#x27;200 Rattling Pictures&#x27;: True Williams and the Imagetext of the First American Edition of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer</i>. 2007. </h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="untagged">
   <h3>Gneiting, Teona Tone. <i>The Pencil&#x27;s Role in &quot;Vanity Fair&quot;</i>. <i>Huntington Library Quarterly</i>. 1976.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">untagged</span>
    <span class="tag">The Adventures of Tom Sawyer</span>
    <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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   <div class="notes hidden">
   <div class="notes hidden">
     <p>No notes available.</p>
     <p>Not directly relevant for illustrations in MarK Twain’s work</p>
   </div>
   </div>
</div>
</div>
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<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="Mark Twain Roughing It book illustrations">
<!-- 33 -->
   <h3>Dumas, Frédéric. <i>Illustration and Imagination: Mark Twain’s Roughing It and John Gast’s American Progress</i>. <i>ILCEA [Revue de l’Institut des langues et cultures d&#x27;Europe, Amérique, Afrique, Asie et Australie]</i>. 2021. <a href="http://journals.openedition.org/ilcea/13250" target="_blank">http://journals.openedition.org/ilcea/13250</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>The Pictorial Huck Finn: Mark Twain and His Illustrator, E. W. Kemble</i>. <i>American Quarterly</i>.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
    <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
    <span class="tag">Roughing It</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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<!-- 34 -->
   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>Mark Twain and his illustrators</i>. 1986. <a href="http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy032/85051269.html" target="_blank">http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy032/85051269.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w">
   <h3>David, Beverly R., and Leonard, Tames S.. "The relationship of Kemble’s illustrations to Mark Twain’s text: using pictures to teach Huck Finn". 1999.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
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<!-- 35 -->
   <h3>Inge, M. Thomas, et al.. <i>Mark Twain and Dan Beard&#x27;s Collaborative Connecticut Yankee</i>. 1994. <a href="https://archive.org/details/authoritytextual0000unse/page/n5/mode/2up" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/authoritytextual0000unse/page/n5/mode/2up</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="adventures_of_huckleberry_finn kemble_edward_w mark_twain book_illustrations">
   <h3>Martin, Francis, Jr.. <i>To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art</i>. <i>The Journal of Popular Culture</i>. 2007.</h3>


   <div class="bib-tags">
   <div class="bib-tags">
     <span class="tag">A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur&#x27;s Court</span>
     <span class="tag">Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</span>
    <span class="tag">Kemble, Edward W.</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">Mark Twain</span>
     <span class="tag">book illustrations</span>
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   <h3>David, Beverly R.. <i>Mark Twain and his illustrators</i>. 2001. <a href="http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy032/85051269.html" target="_blank">http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy032/85051269.html</a>.</h3>
<div class="bib-entry" data-tags="untagged">
   <h3>Sollors, Werner, and Brennan, Jonathan. "Was Roxy black? Race as stereotype in Mark Twain, Edward Windsor Kemble and Paul Laurence Dunbar". 2002.</h3>


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Latest revision as of 11:51, 26 May 2026

Relevant Literature


Use the search bar or select one or more tags to find related sources.

Gannon, Susan R., and Clark, Beverly Lyon. "'200 Rattling Pictures': True Williams and the Imagetext of the First American Edition of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer". 2007.

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Newell, Kate. 'You don't know about me without you have read a book': Authenticity in Adaptations of 'Adventures of Huckleberry Finn'. Literature/Film Quarterly. 2013.

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Holt, Elvin. A Coon Alphabet and the Comic Mask of Racial Prejudice. Studies in American Humor. 1986.

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Sonstegard, Adam. Artistic liberty and slave imagery: ‘Mark Twain's illustrator,' E. W. Kemble, turns to Harriet Beecher Stowe. Nineteenth-Century Literature.

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Leonard, James S. et al.. Author-ity and textuality: current views of collaborative writing. 1994.

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Kinghorn, Norton D.. E. W. Kemble's Misplaced Modifier: A Note on the Illustrations for 'Huckleberry Finn'. Mark Twain Journal.

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Railton, Stephen. "Illustrating Pudd'nhead".

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this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract this is a test abstract ...

Railton, Stephen. "Illustrating Huckleberry Finn: E. W. Kemble". Illustrating Huck Homepage.

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unknown. "Illustrating Pudd'nhead".

untagged

unknown. "Illustrating Pudd'nhead".

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Dumas, Frédéric. Illustration and Imagination: Mark Twain’s Roughing It and John Gast’s American Progress. ILCEA [Revue de l’Institut des langues et cultures d'Europe, Amérique, Afrique, Asie et Australie]. 2021.

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Teutsch, Matthew. "Illustrations in “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”". Interminable Rambling.

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Barclay, Donald A.. Interpreted Well Enough: Two Illustrators' Visions of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Horn Book Magazine. 1992.

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Briden, Earl F.. Kemble's 'Specialty' and the Pictorial Countertext of Huckleberry Finn. Mark Twain Journal. 1988.

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Inge, M. Thomas et al.. "Mark Twain and Dan Beard's Collaborative Connecticut Yankee". 1994.

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David, Beverly R.. Mark Twain and his illustrators. 1986.

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David, Beverly R.. Mark Twain and his illustrators. 2001.

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David, Beverly R.. Mark Twain and the Legends for "Huckleberry Finn". American Literary Realism.

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Schmidt, Barbara. "Mark Twain Uniform Editions--Ch 17--Pudd'nhead Wilson". Twainquotes.com.

untagged

Wonham, Henry B.. Playing the races: ethnic caricature and American literary realism. 2004.

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David, Berverly R. et al.. "Reading the illustrations in Huckleberry Finn". 1996.

Kemble, Edward W.

Anderson, Douglas. Reading the Pictures of Huckleberry Finn. Arizona Quarterly. 1986.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W.

Railton, Stephen. "Representing Jim, 1885-1985". Illustrating Huck Homepage.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W.

Martin, Adam. "See Edward Ardizzone's Lost 'Huck Finn' Illustrations". The Atlantic. 2011.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Drawings done by the English artist in 1970 were found in a publisher's desk

Nölle-Fischer, Karen. Selling Mark Twain’s Connecticut Yankee in America: Marketing and Illustrations. Revue française d’études américaines. 1983.

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court Mark Twain book illustrations

Clark, Beverly Lyon. The adventures of Tom Sawyer: authoritative text, backgrounds and contexts, criticism. 2007.

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Boime, Albert. The Art of Exclusion: Representing Blacks in the Nineteenth Century. 1990.

untagged

Railton, Stephen. "The evasion will be illustrated". Illustrating Huck Homepage.

untagged

Anspaugh, Kelly. The Innocent Eye? E. W. Kemble's Illustrations to 'Adventures of Huckleberry Finn'. American Literary Realism.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations

Gneiting, Teona Tone. The Pencil's Role in "Vanity Fair". Huntington Library Quarterly. 1976.

untagged

David, Beverly R.. The Pictorial Huck Finn: Mark Twain and His Illustrator, E. W. Kemble. American Quarterly.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations

David, Beverly R., and Leonard, Tames S.. "The relationship of Kemble’s illustrations to Mark Twain’s text: using pictures to teach Huck Finn". 1999.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W.

Martin, Francis, Jr.. To Ignore Is to Deny: E. W. Kemble’s Racial Caricature as Popular Art. The Journal of Popular Culture. 2007.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Kemble, Edward W. Mark Twain book illustrations

Sollors, Werner, and Brennan, Jonathan. "Was Roxy black? Race as stereotype in Mark Twain, Edward Windsor Kemble and Paul Laurence Dunbar". 2002.

untagged