The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a mind capturing novel that shows the internal and external undertakings of a young teenage boy. Huckleberry Finn ventures into the world of discovery and learn what the world is truly made of, and shares an experience from a thirteen-year-old boy’s perspective. The narrator being Huckleberry gives a realistic and venturous meaning to how a child, from the 1830’s, views this harsh planet and the people it inhabitants. Huckleberry Finn's younger perspective on his adventures gives another meaning of innocents and adolescents to the story, that if conveyed by any other character would change the story completely. Huckleberry Finn’s youth sets the entire story to be innocent. The way Huckleberry grew up with two different teachings, going …show more content…
The themes, for instance, would be considered differently with alcoholism the novel does not specifically mention alcohol or the use of alcohol by Jim or around him that seriously influence like it influenced Huck’s life. Told from Jim’s perspective the innocents of the view of the world would change drastically. Being a slave Jim would view the world’s hatred as much more prevalent and expected, Huck sees the world as a blank canvas and then as he ventures he sees its true form and how harsh it is. “It was enough to make a body ashamed of the human race” (162). It is given as a grown belief rather an expected belief that Jim would perceive. Huck realizes the discuss of the human race when he sees the dauphine and the duke conning the decease Wilk’s family. Huckleberry saw it in his adventures and not in everyday life, except with Paps, however Jim views the harshness in everyday life as he is put through difficult conditions and situations with his own family. This would change his attitude and the way he explained the