Huckleberry Finn Influence On Family

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There is the saying the apple does not fall far from the tree; this is proven to be somewhat true. People are constantly changing by what is factoring into their daily life and this includes people. Socialization can have a negative or positive effect just like everything else. Children particularly, grow based on what is going on around them. In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, a realistic fiction by Mark Twain, Twain demonstrates how factors from family can influence behaviors of a person with Huck Finn. Immediate family tends to be the most influential and Huck’s only immediate family is Pap. Those around Pap view him as “a reprobate drunk and a most distrustful, negligent, rapacious, exploitative, abusive, gratuitously cruel parent” and he knows he is viewed at the bottom of the social classes (Semrau). The negative view of Pap is what Huck thinks is normal for a father. He is use to his father being an abusive drunk and caring in a negative manner. Huckleberry Finn is use to being very lonely because Pap kidnapped him and “imprisons him in a lonely cabin” because his father wanted the money Huck use to have or control over his son ("The Adventures of…”). Huckleberry had started to integrate into society with the widow before Pap took him and since being with Pap he has decided that Pap’s way of life is correct. How …show more content…

The families differed in how they behaved and influenced him in different ways. With Pap, he thought that the drunken violence is normal of a father, but Jim contradicted it when he explained the story of how he felt guilty hitting his daughter. Then there was the widow and the Grangerford’s who were both civilized by society's view, but behind closed doors only the widow continued that behavior. The difference in families all showed Huckleberry different influences family could have on a