Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
To dream of freedom is a sensational idea but experiencing freedom is as rare as the New Year eve among common days. While freedom is a great aspiration, it is not a dream that belongs to physical slaves alone. Huck and Jim; the characters painted by Mark Twin in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn depict that a person can long for freedom whether he belongs to a civilized world or uncivilized world. Huck and Jim are representatives of two different backgrounds but their desire to be free and to enjoy every moment of life is same. Jim is the character whose adventure begins due to his flight while Huck is not 'behaving well' because behaving well is something that takes one to the heaven and Huck is attracted by the definition of hell that his teacher offers. The South of America is associated with freedom. It is a place to which Mississippi is 'road'. The tale is a master piece of Mark Twain especially for those that find pleasure, adventure and fun in the literature. It is a 19th-century's piece of work that a reader enjoys because of a thrilling entertainment presented in it. It offers real fun by taking the reader to virtual ride in a boat, a vulnerable journey, and excitement full of fear. The ultimate fun of the novel begins with warning of Mark Twain that "Persons attempting to find a motive in this narrative will be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot." Thus the aim of the novel is entertainment and not to follow the established rules of literature. The river is painted beautifully and Mark Twain, who has once worked as a steamboat driver at Mississippi river, describes the river with minute details. It is therefore that the reader does not only read the story but he is entertained fully till the last page.
Introduction
For the people living in the civilized urban areas, literature and movies are often sources of adventure. Many today are not able to take a ride to Mississippi or the Great Canyon and thus stories like The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn offer them the entertainment readers might not forget easily. There are many things that can be done simply for the sake of pleasure and fun without finding meanings in them. For those wanting to enjoy literature, Mark Twain has composed a great book. It is the dedication of characters and practical life experience of Mark Twain that has made the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn far more appealing. The book is next episode to Adventures of Tom Sawyer so that the readers get to know what happens next after a person gets a lot of money. The reader finds that money is not as purposeful as is adventure.
Like the word adventure sounds, the novel offers a thrilling entertainment where every character seeks freedom and his pursuit to liberty leads him to a state where they have to become reckless. Mark Twain's warning at the beginning of the novel i.e. not to interpret, find motive or purpose in the novel seems to be for his characters too. The characters of the novel Huck, Jim, Tom, and the Duke and the Dauphin are just following the path of adventure. Jim and Huck are two souls that dare to face the challenges of life simply to achieve the destination of independence. To Twain, there needs not be a compulsory solid and tangible objective behind everything. The novel is one of its kind where the characters' quest is intangible i.e. liberty rather than a lover, a land, a job or so. Huck already has enough to spend a life but what he misses is freedom. It is not money, job or land that satisfies free souls. It is carelessness and freedom from norms that pleases them as said "I got into my old rags and my sugar-hogshead again, and was free and satisfied"(Twain, 4). There is a lot of work, both appreciative and critical, on the novel of Mark Twain. The fun in book is explored with the help of what the other authors narrated too. These authors include Reeb, Burg and Joshi.
Burg, David F.
Another View of Huckleberry Finn
1974
Mark Twain did not give importance to the critiques as if he thought that 'haters gonna hate!'. Besides a few that focused on what the book did not offer, there were many others that liked it. The book was perceived by many as the ultimate guide book to joy. It tells how to hunt life and adventure around us. "Huckleberry Finn might well...
Huckleberry Finn and What Makes an American What Makes Twain's Huckleberry Finn American? "Those canonic ideals -- self-government, equal opportunity, freedom of speech and association, a belief in progress, were first proclaimed during the era of the Revolution and the early republic and have developed more expansive meanings since then," these are the basic core ideals which make something truly American (Kazin & McCartin 1). The freedom to live as we want,
Examining the difficult process that Huck has when he finally determines not to turn Jim in can be especially helpful in this. In addition, readers of this opinion can discuss the effects of Twain's own divergence from society when contemplating the ways in which his articulation of his nonstandard views into text affected society. Thus, while two sides clearly exist in this debate -- one stating that Twain's novel advocates
The real reason to go: Self-knowledge about Huckleberry and Jim's roles in their society. Huckleberry has always existed on the margins of society, because of his class. Even at the beginning of the novel he intuitively senses the falseness of piety and middle-class morality, embodied by the religious drawings of the bloodthirsty Grangerford's dead daughter. Unlike the civilized Miss Watson, Huck instinctively treats Jim like an equal, and his only
" (Henry James, p.45) Winterbourne knew that Daisy was basically a very innocent person and it was her innocence that was responsible for her disposition. Huck Finn was also guided by his innocent and generous heart. He tries to seek answers to moral issues through his own heart than any ill-guided dictates of the society. The most enlightening moment for him comes when he is torn between returning Jim to Miss
The slave economics of the plantation system do as well: the economics of the South explain why being a personal slave of a woman like Miss Watson in a more genteel area of the country is not as 'bad' as being a plantation slave in the deep South. The prospect of being sold further down South is what makes Jim so fearful. The politics of a corrupt political system
Furious that his son had learned how to read and write, Pap considers that Huck wants to prove that he is smarter than his father. As a result, Huck receives several beatings and is kidnapped by Pap. During his stay on Jackson's island, Huck learns that Jim has a lot of knowledge from observing the nature and its laws, along with tons of superstitious beliefs: "Some young birds come along...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now