Mark Twain's realism in fully discovered in the novel The adventures of Huckleberry Finn, book which is known to most of readers since high school, but which has a deeper moral and educational meaning than a simple teenage adventure story. The simplicity of plot and the events that are described in the book look to be routine for provincial life of Southerners in the middle of the 19th century. But in reality, the problems touched are deeper and more expanded as they refer to nearly every sphere of society's life of that epoch.
I'm not sure that any other writer had shown such a full encyclopedia of American life in 1840 ies -- 1850 ies in just one of his novels. But Mark Twain succeeded to show the conflict of an individual and society, slavery issues, immorality and bigotry of "civilized" society, religious, Philistine and racial prejudices of Southerners, problems of education and progress over the conservatism in the minds of common people.
Moreover his realism is unique and genuine as he gives the narration to the main character- Heck Finn. As it was sated by L. Champion:"If the story of the narrative present is, then, as I have said it is, the story of Huck Finn's setting out to tell the truth, finding that he is not permitted that luxury, sensing that life itself had played him for a fool at a moment when he had thought he had been most conscientious, and becoming finally a teller of the tall tale, it is important to remember also that Mark Twain had his own tall tale to tell. He warned us in his published notice: 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. " (Champion, Laurie The Critical Response to Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn Book; Greenwood Press, 1991 p.140)
The language used in the novel fully reflects the cultural and lingual particularities of that epoch, often illiterate and full of local Southern dialects. But the usage of dialects attaches an importance of social status, beliefs and moral qualities of the characters. Pap's words about African-Americans reflect usual attitudes of white people, who didn't even considered slaves to be people, just labor units, nothing more: "Oh, yes, this is a wonderful govment, wonderful-There was a free nigger there, from Ohio-they said he was a p-fessor in a college, and could talk all kinds of languages, and knowed everything. And that ain-t the wust. They said he could vote, when he was at home-they told me there was a State in this country where they-d let that nigger vote, I drawed out. I says I-ll never vote agin (Mark Twain, The adventures of Huckleberry Finn, p.20)."
Jim's dialect is typical dialect of a Southern slave, uneducated and oppressed person, whose role was to obey his masters. But the achievement of Twain's realism reveals is the depiction of Jim's character as of real personality, a merit and decent person, in some way a realization of folk's wisdom. He depicted him as a human, probably the most complete personality in the novel:"When Fitzgerald said that Huck's "eyes were the first eyes that ever looked at us objectively that were not eyes from overseas," he was undoubtedly referring to European eyes... European critic scorned not only the roughness, rudeness, and vulgarity in the United States, but indicted the hypocrisy in a nation that professed democracy and practiced slavery. Europeans were not, however, the first to see Euro-Americans objectively. Among those who preceded them were Africans and African-Americans, whose objectivity, uncompromised by preconceptions of dark-skinned peoples, is recorded in a variety of forms, including the slave narratives, which were first published in the latter part of the eighteenth century." ( Mensh, Elaine Black, White, and Huckleberry Finn: Re-Imagining the American Dream University of Alabama Press, 2000 p.34 )
For Heck Finn, teenage boy of 14, it's quite a dilemma which way to choose- to admit Jim be a human and a friend, or to follow the norms of southern society- to return Jim to slave owners. For Heck this journey down Mississippi river is escape from "moral slavery," slavery that was resulted by his relations with society, and...
" (Ibid) the term cosmology is derived from the Greek word 'kosmos' meaning order and refers to the world and the universe. (Ibid, paraphrased) the cosmologic philosopher is stated to be on who "contemplates the nature of this order and is concerned with the relationships between the plants, the stars and the earth. The laws of the universe are important topics to cosmologic philosophers. They consider the laws of thermodynamics,
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