Friday, August 2, 2019
Free Essays - Social Themes in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn :: Adventures Huckleberry Huck Finn Essays
      Social Themes in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn                 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a novel  that will continue to     be read for decades to come.  Why? The novel by Mark Twain, or  Samuel     Clemens, has many themes that relate to society today.  Even today  society     continues to talk about whether the novel should be read amongst high-     school curriculums.  Society is also continuing to deal with racism,  and     its effects on the lives of African-Americans.  Another theme that  is     prevalent in society is lying among American children.                   Huck Finn is a self taught liar,  and a very good one at that.  On     the raft, while floating down the Mississippi, Huck has an opportunity to     exercise his gift for lying.  The boy enjoys mendacity; he lies for  the     sake of lying and keeps the reader turning the page piling on one fiction     after another.  Just before the runaways get started, Huck visits a     neighboring town to get information and encounters a farmer's wife.  He  is     dressed in an old dress and is pretending to be a young girl searching  for     her relatives.  The woman suspects his sex and tries various devices  to     ascertain if her suspicions are true.  Among these is threading a  needle     and throwing a bar of lead at the rats which swarm around the house.     Finally she makes Huck own up that he is a boy.  In any case, this is  a     great example of a young boy lying until his nose is a foot long.  Lying  is     prevalent among today's children as well.                   Racism has an obvious connection  to today's society.  In the novel     Huck says many "racist" comments.  In this scene Aunt Sally hears of  a     steamboat explosion.                 "Good gracious! anybody hurt?" she asks.           "No'm," comes the answer.  "Killed a  nigger."                   Aunt Sally later refers to the  "nigger" as if they are not even  a     person, regarding the death as if it did not even matter.           "Well, it's lucky because sometimes people do get hurt."                   At first glance at the novel  Huckleberry Finn, many would protest     to the explicit use of the "N" word which was used over two-hundred  times.     As a result Huck Finn, one of the greatest American novels is noteworthy.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.