>Dear Twainians: > >Until this week, I had a panel arranged for the American Humor Studies >Association/American Literature Association conference in Cancun, Mexico, >December 8-11, 1994. The panel's title is "Twain's Children: Modern >Humorists Descended from the Master." > >Now I find that one, possibly two, of my three panelists cannot attend. > >Therefore, I am issuing a general call for some response by August 30 for at >least one more paper for this session, possibly two. A provocative title >will be enough; a short (100-150 words) abstract would be even better. > >Please respond either through e-mail or by writing me at 3653 Maple Glen >Lane, Charlotte, NC 28226-4834, or by calling me at >704-556-0360. > >Hopefully, >Joe Alvarez > Dear Joe: I called your machine this morning. I hope it is not too late to get this idea into your program. Even if it is not, please get back to me about next year's program. I just checked two weeks worth of e-mail yesterday, and thought up the idea while trying to get to sleep last night. Here's the idea: "Standup as Storyteller: Richard Pryor's Comic Style" Richard Pryor's standup routines throughout the 1970s and 1980s grew from simple gags and put-ons into full-fledged stories. By the time he went _Live on the Sunset Strip_, he had moved well beyond his generation of comics. He had become a social satirist who shared much of Mark Twain's style and techniques. Pryor's narrative voice, whether relating travels through Africa or on-location movie shooting in an Arizona prison, resembled the bemused lightness of _An Innocent Abroad_. Another, probably more significant stylistic tool, is Pryor's use of voices in his storytelling. The laughs Twain and his contemporaries generated by imitating black dialect were at least equaled by Pryor's biting parodies of white speech. The similarities between the most influential white comic storyteller of the 19th century and the most influential black oral artist of the late 20th century go beyond the basic tools of the trade. The parallels are further evidence that Twain had tapped into a rich comic stream that African Americans enjoyed for centuries, and the majority culture has only recently started to map and appreciate. Thank you for considering this idea. Please let me know as soon as possible if it fits your needs. Planning for such a trip so soon will take some effort. Thanks. Siva Vaidhyanathan University of Texas