“The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” Topics
1. The river in “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” is used constantly throughout the novel. It is used as transportation for Huck’s raft throughout his journey, and offers him safety whenever he is in danger and needs a quick escape. However, there is also a more underlying meaning to the river. The river is used to make Huck learn about responsibility after leaving his abusive household and forcing him to take care of himself. On his own with no one but the runaway slave Jim, the river serves to help them both grow independently. By leading the pair to different conflicts so that they can be resolved help Jim and especially Huck learn more about the society that they live in.
2. The two main people
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Huck Finn as the narrator gives the reader a sense of the type of thoughts adolescents of the time period had. Rather than making the protagonist an adult that has learned a lot about the world, the main character is a teenager who is still getting used to how the world works. Huck also speaks in a certain dialect that gives the reader a clear idea of what his mannerisms are. Huck also does not act in order to help himself selfishly. Even though he is shown lying throughout the novel multiple times it is never to the detriment of others. Meanwhile, other adults would get caught in feuds and shady business practices, which may be Mark Twain's way of making fun of adult …show more content…
Huck toward the end of the book has changed tremendously throughout his adventures. While he used to see himself above slaves, his interactions with Jim cause him to realize that they should be his equal and not discriminated against. Jim is finally a free man at the end of the book after the hardships that he endured both as a slave and as a runaway on his adventures. It seems appropriate that the most noble of all the characters gets the happiest ending. Tom in the end of the novel was very amusing when planning the escape of Jim, but also came off as very selfish. Rather than prioritizing the rescue of Jim, he makes it his main goal to have a grand adventure acted out in the way he envisions