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Huck Finn

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Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn is perhaps one of the most controversial novels the North American Continent has ever produced. Since its publication more than a hundred years ago controversy has surrounded the book. The most basic debate surrounding Twain’s masterpiece is whether the book’s language and the character of Jim are presented in a racist manner. Many have called for the book to be banned from our nation’s schools and libraries. Mark Twain’s novel is about a young boy who was raised in the south before slavery was abolished, a place where racism and bigotry were the fabric of every day life. The novel is the account of how Huck Finn, who is a product of these times, transcended the morals and values of these times through his relationship with the escaped slave Jim. Huckleberry Finn is a mixture of satire and adventure story. It is a novel about growing up in a time and place that still haunts the living, the American past. It is about a past, and the origins of that past, that still lie heavy on the American conscience. This paper will examine the character, morals and values of Huckleberry Finn. It will discuss his relationship to the values of his society and the conflict that is produced between those values and the relationship that grows between him and Jim during their adventure.

The character of Huck Finn has become a kind of an American folk hero. He is a kid who knows how to live by his wits.

. . .
f society with Pap. He sets off down the river to perhaps an undiscovered country beyond the values and morals of the early 19th century South. Huck Finn is the voice of Twain’s dissension and nothing of the Southern culture of which he is apart fails to fall under intense examination that eventually leads to its rejection. Huck’s attitude toward the “official” religion of the land becomes increasingly cynical. In Huckleberry Finn religion undergoes an imminent or internal critique. That is, it is placed under judgment by measuring it against its own standards and it fails. The section of the novel that deals with George Jackson and the Grangerfords exposes the Christianity of the feuding families as anything but a representation of the main tenets found in Christianity: “The religion of loving thy neighbor and turning the other cheek is the real fatality of the feud. In this section Twain deliberately exposes Christianity as morbid and hypocritical, its adherents hating where they should love, and killing where thy should give life. . . The feud chapters thus give further point and emphasis to the two dimensions of the novel we have already characterized as Twain’s major themes: the corruptness of religion and the falsit
. . .

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Approximate Word count = 1795
Approximate Pages = 7 (250 words per page)

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