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There are lots of intriguing titles that treat this development, 2 of which
I will mention here:
The Culture of Cynicism: American Morality in Decline. By Richard Stivers,
(cultural history and criticism)
And
Seeing through Cynicism: A Reconsideration of the Power of Suspicion. By
Dick Keyes (this last one is more of a Christian response to the problems
of cynicism in our culture)
Personally, I would attribute much of Twain's darkness in his final period
to the traumatic grief associated with deaths of his family members, coupled
with his own declining health. That said, I see much evidence for his
maintaining hope and kindness and joyfulness in those years, some of which I
document in my own book on spiritual crises.
Harold K. Bush, Jr.
Saint Louis University
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