Anyone can be a hero. The novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, tests the idea of the stereotypical, strong and powerful hero. Huck Finn is an average boy who goes through a great journey. Huck Finn isn’t your average hero, this young boy challenges the idea of being a hero in today’s world. Huck being a young boy is not confident in himself, he sees himself as a follower but through his journey he transforms into a young, confident man. Huck’s journey throughout the novel, specifically, The Call to Adventure, Abyss, and Atonement are responsible in creating a young hero. In the Hero's Journey, The Call to Adventure is when the hero is forced to face external pressure. The Call to Adventure is marked when Pap, Huck’s dad, returns. Pap gets custody of Huck even though he is an abusive drunk, not fit to raise his son. Pap tells Huck that there’s a lawsuit to get Huck taken away from him and go back to the widow, “This shook me up considerable, because I didn’t want to go back to the widow’s any more and be so cramped up and sivilized, as they called it” ( Twain 27). Huck is fed up with this town, he wants to be free and decides he …show more content…
Jim is in chains again even though Huck has done everything you could to save him. Tom finally reveals that Jim has been a free man all along, Miss. Watson, Jim’s deceased owner, had freed him in her will. Now that Jim was free, Huck wanted to be free too. Huck announces his plan of going out west, “But I reckon I got to light out for the Territory ahead of the rest, because Aunt Sally she’s going to adopt me and sivilize me, and I can’t stand it. I been there before” (Twain 295). Huck has realized that society should not dictate all of his actions. Hucks dedication to Jim throughout the story shows how much he has grown, he is no longer a follower and has new beliefs that have set him