Lecture 2 – Mark Twain and the Birth of American Realism | A Free University-Level Course

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Welcome to Lecture 2 in our free academic series, “The Great American Authors,” presented as a public gift to homeschoolers, independent learners, and anyone pursuing genuine intellectual growth outside the walls of conventional academia.

This lecture—produced courtesy of Science Fiction Author D. Colin Palmer and Poker Lodge Studios—explores the brilliance of Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens), the riverboat philosopher whose pen dismantled hypocrisy and whose laughter changed the trajectory of literature itself.

In this comprehensive lecture, we analyze Twain’s revolutionary use of vernacular speech, his ferocious moral clarity, and his fearless exposure of slavery, empire, and human folly. Through works such as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Pudd’nhead Wilson, The War Prayer, and The Gilded Age, we explore Twain’s evolution from humorist to moral anatomist—a man who forced America to confront its illusions and measure its conscience by the river’s current.

This series is part of a larger educational mission: to provide free, unaccredited university-level education in the humanities—covering philosophy, literature, history, and ethics—available to all. Each course is designed for homeschool integration or independent study, emphasizing critical thinking, intellectual honesty, and moral courage over rote memorization.

Lecture Focus:

Twain’s critique of slavery and the hypocrisy of “civilization.”

The Mississippi River as symbol and moral frontier.

The Gilded Age and the anatomy of corruption.

Anti-imperialism and the moral cost of empire.

Twain’s late-life determinism and religious skepticism.

The vernacular revolution: how Huck Finn birthed modern American prose.

Twain’s lasting influence on Hemingway, Faulkner, and contemporary satire.

Every lecture in this series is free to access, designed to spark curiosity, restore moral inquiry, and remind us that education should serve the mind—not the marketplace.

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