Examples Of Satire In Huckleberry Finn

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In Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain’s novel about the slave owning society, goes into deep immense examples of how cruel humans were to each other. Mark Twain, who is a realistic fiction writer, includes satire and humor in his writing, including Representative elements to expand how the reader interprets the story. Although Twain wrote Huckleberry Finn two decades after the Emancipation Proclamation and the end of the Civil War, America—and especially the South—was still struggling with racism and the aftereffects of slavery. He uses many representative characters like Huck and Jim, who both can be debated as the heroes. They both have good intentions and help others. Mark Twain portrays Jim as a genuinely caring and loyal friend. Jim becomes …show more content…

Twain’s blunt choice of words gave a vivid description of how the white people really treated the slaves. The characters ranging from Huck to Mrs. Watson all portrayed all the views of slavery in this society. Hulk is a thirteen-year-old boy who is forced into having to grow up at an early age. Hulk is accompanied by a slave named Jim, on his quest for freedom, the two get to know each other and Hulk becomes more understanding of Jim more as a human being instead of seeing at him as just property. Along the way Hulk and Jim run into other characters who also implicate a role in their quest. The Duke and the Dauphin are two con men who have ran across Hulk and Jim and are looking into to using them in their next get rich quick scheme. All and all Jim is set free by Mrs. Watson and Hulk realizes that Jim is to a human being like him understanding that things in the society are not actually …show more content…

The Duke and the Dauphin represents a figment of Twain’s imagination. He was a character who came in trying to brighten up the story adding some humor. These two were putting on play performances through towns collecting money. It is clear that these are con men, for they hurt numerous of innocent people. Twain presents the Duke and the Dauphin (king) as stock characters. The Duke and the Dauphin are being rescued by Jim and Hulk as they are being ran out of town. The older man, who appears to be in his seventies, claims to be the “dauphin,” the son of King Louise XVI and heir to the French throne. His other complaint the young man, in his thirties, claims to be the assumed “Duke of