Huck Finn Analysis

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The author is showing how Tom Sawyer isn’t important and how no one would have read the book if it was about him. Huck reveals he is apart of the southern language by saying “I never seen” but in the proper english it is “I have never seen” Tom and Huck's imagination even though they might be older and mature this shows how they still have an active imagination unlike some people their age during that period of time. This shows how Huck is in the moment. If it’s not happening now, Huck doesn’t care” This shows that back then they referred to the black race as “Niggers” but now a days if you called a man or woman of the race a “Nigger” it is highly offensive in and outside of the race. But in some ways people might use that word as a joke …show more content…

Which also shows how the drug addiction and the use of alcohol is changing his mind to also remind readers that “ hey maybe this stuff isn’t good for your body”. One of the most noteworthy aspects of Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is the skillful way in which Twain relates Huck’s thoughts. By telling the story from the first person point of view, Twain not only lets the reader into Huck’s mind, but he also allows Huck to characterize himself in terms of dialect—his manner of speaking, as we hear his thoughts in his own uneducated and thoroughly “countrified” voice. This Quote is referring to the recurring idea of racism. This is also showing the effects on slaves and what they had to go through. Huck isn't happy about having to apologize to a black man, but he does it. It's super impressive for the time and place that he ends up apologizing, but we can see that he's still, well, racist—he's just less racist than everyone else. Is Twain holding him up as an example, or does Twain want us to do better. This shows that Jim can't believe that people speak different languages all over the world, since we're all the same. But if we're all the same, why are some of us enslaved? And why doesn't he seem to make that conceptual