Thursday, January 19, 2012

Not So Big

I was thoroughly amused by all of Twain's stories, I think my favorite story so far of his has been: Letters From The Earth. This story was my favorite I think because the perspective that he took was very surprising. It feels like during this time there wouldn’t be many writers who describe Earth as being a speck in the universe, instead of the center of their lives. It’s a rare thought to imagine ourselves as seemingly minute, and nothing to the outside, but in this story it is exactly how Satan describes Earth’s existence.
Earth looks so big and beautiful...

I had never thought about the general perception of heaven, though it is quite evident even in the media and the movies that it is imagined to be light, fluffy and full of music. Satan makes it clear the hilarity of this classical image of heaven.
Perfect heaven, cause everyone is making music.


Heaven is just one of the several pieces of his Earth “break-down” that is hilarious. Satan really finds everything ridiculous about the human race. Which makes this seemingly satirical story all the better. Every part of our religious culture taken from a seemingly outside perspective and thrown the microscope makes me think of every other part of our society that could be broken down and made hilarious. If only there were a series of stories, where the main plot line was: “people are weird”—I would read it!

Twain’s story I felt just exemplified that we’re not so big after all.
Of course Twain as it seems is a professional at making jokes at the expense of everything that not in line with himself and his beliefs. Beginning with his “Whittier Birthday Speech”, and then later the hilarious “Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences”.

Hey look! There we are!


Jokes at the expensive of everyone else are pretty entertaining—though apparently not to all those present at Whitter’s birthday dinner, ooops Twain. ;)

2 comments:

  1. Ashina, your pictures make it clear that the version of heaven Twain satirizes is still very much with us. That's an interesting point about the cosmic scale of the universe versus the tiny corner of it that humanity inhabits. Twain wrote about this in other late pieces, too.

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  2. Thank you for continuing to use pictures!!! I like your take on the Letters to Earth, which were exemplified through the pictures. In particular, the point about how Twain describes the universe in where Earth is in relation to said universe.

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