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This year, the Mark Twain Project is finally publishing the author's uncensored
autobiography. Finally, because Twain decreed that this document not be published
in its entirety until 100 years after his death, which took place in 1910, when
he was 75.
The autobiography, along with nearly a million pages of other
material penned by Twain, including letters and notebooks, have been housed at
the Mark Twain Project on the University of California Berkeley campus since 1949.
Twain's only surviving daughter, Clara, decreed in her will - that the papers
go to Berkeley - where one of Twain's biographers was teaching. The previously
unpublished essay "Concerning the Interview" (~1889) provides a unique
glimpse into the mind of Mark Twain, perhaps America's greatest and funniest writer,
and offers striking commentary on the role of the media in American society that
still resonates 120 years later. 
Procedures: 1. Begin class by facilitating a short discussion about Mark Twain
and the media using questions such as:
- Who was Mark Twain?
- Why
might a journalist or reporter want to interview Mark Twain?
- When you
think of the term "media", what comes to mind?
- What is the
role of the media?
- What is the role of an interviewer?
2.
Distribute "Concerning the Interview" along with the Discussion
Questions and place students into small groups to read the article and formulate
answers to the questions. 3. As a class, discuss the essay and Discussion
Questions handout to get a general feeling about how the students feel about Twain's
point of view regarding interviews. 4. Explain that this essay was written
by Mark Twain over 100 years ago. Then pose the following questions:
-
How do you think the media has changed over the past 100 years? Give examples.
-
What role has technology played in the way media is used and accessed by people?
5.
Explain that as a class, students will be working in groups to learn about various
issues related to the rights and responsibilities associated with the media. Place
the students back into the groups used in step 2 above. Using the questions below,
have each group select a question to learn about and present to their classmates.
- What makes someone a celebrity or public figure, and what rights
do these people have when it comes to the media and the information that is reported
about them?
- As a journalist, what laws and ethical codes of conduct
apply when it comes to obtaining a story and sharing it with others through various
media outlets?
- For a long time there has been a popular saying that
reads "There is no such thing as bad press." Explore this idea by finding
examples of how even negative press can have a positive effect on the person or
group that is the subject of the article or report.
- Paparazzi vs.
journalists-what is the difference?
- Media bias-what is it and how
can you spot it?
- Journalists and the Bill of Rights-what are the laws
about how information is obtained and reported?
6. Using internet
and library resources, allow each group to learn as much as they can about their
designated question. Provide the group with time to formulate a way to present
their findings to classmates in an interesting and entertaining method. This could
be through a game students play, a quiz they take, a skit that is performed, specific
video clips that are played to illustrate various ideas, or a power point or other
multi-media presentation that illustrates the main ideas and information that
has been learned through specific examples. 7. Allow each group to present
its ideas to classmates so that students develop a basic understanding of the
principles that govern the media and methods is uses to obtain and share information. 8.
As a closing activity, ask students to complete a written response to a question
such as: " In his essay, Twain compares the interviewer to a cyclone.
Would you agree with this comparison? Explain why using what you have learned
from this lesson? 
Have students read this fictional piece entitled "An
Encounter with an Interviewer" written by Mark Twain before the non-fiction
"Concerning the Interview." Ask students to compare the two. What are
the points Twain makes in each? Which piece is stronger? Why? Why might Twain
have tackled the topic both ways? http://www.online-literature.com/twain/3271/ |