Sunday, August 4, 2019
Huck Finn :: essays research papers
   Adventures of Huckleberry Finn                  The conflict between society and the individual is a very important    theme portrayed throughout Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry    Finn. Many people see Huckleberry Finn as a mischievous boy who is a bad    influence to others. Huck is not raised in agreement with the accepted ways    of civilization. He practically raises himself, relying on instinct to guide him    through life. As seen several times in the novel, Huck chooses to follow his    innate sense of right, yet he does not realize that his own instincts are more    right than those of society.                  Society refuses to accept Huck as he is and isn't going to change its    opinions about him until he is reformed and civilized. The Widow Douglas    and Miss Watson try to "sivilize" Huck by making him stop all of his habits,    such as smoking. They try to reverse all of his teachings from the first twelve    years of his life and force him to become their stereotypical good boy.     However, from the very beginning of the novel, Huck clearly states that he    does not want to conform to society. "The Widow Douglas she took me for    her son, and allowed she would sivilize me...I got into my old rags and my    sugar hogshead again, and was free and satisfied." (page 1) Huck says this    shortly after he begins living with the Widow Douglas because it is rough for    him to be confined to a house and the strict rules of the Widow Douglas.              Huckââ¬â¢s father, a dirty and dishonest drunk, was also a problem. He    was so angry that his son could read, that he severely beat him and then    forced him to stay in a secluded cabin. Huck then devises a plan to escape    and heads down river were he teams up with Jim, a runaway slave.                   The theme becomes even more evident once Huck and Jim set out    down the Mississippi. As they run from civilization and are on the river, they    ponder the social injustices forced upon them when they are on land. The    river never cares how saintly they are, how rich they are, or what society    thinks of them. The river allows Huck the one thing that Huck wants to be,    and that is Huck. Huck enjoys his adventures on the raft. He prefers the    freedom of the wilderness to the restriction of society.                   Also, Huck's acceptance of Jim is a total defiance of society. Society    automatically sees a black person, and even further, slaves, as inferior. They    never think of slaves as human beings, only as property.  					    
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