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Huckleberry Finn’s Impact Discussed At Noah Webster Library

James Joseph Golden of the Mark Twain House & Museum will discuss Adventures of Huckleberry Finn at Noah Webster Library in West Hartford.

From Noah Webster Library: Mark Twain’s 1885 novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is simultaneously acknowledged as a masterpiece and banned from schools. James Joseph Golden, director of education at the Mark Twain House & Museum in Hartford, will explore the book in the long context of American history, beginning with the origins and growth of slavery, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and continuing on through to the Civil Rights movement to today.

Golden studied divinity and history at the University of Edinburgh before completing his doctorate in modern history at the University of Oxford. Since 2015 he has been the director of education at the Mark Twain House & Museum in Hartford and has taught history at Trinity College, the University of Hartford and Wesleyan University. His published work includes contributions to the English Historical Review and collections of essays published by Four Courts Press and Bloomsbury Academic, including Mark Twain and Youth: Studies in his Life and Writing (New York, 2016).

To register for the event, go to http://bit.ly/WHLhuckfinn.

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Image via Noah Webster Library