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Individualism In Richard Wright's Huck Finn

290 Words2 Pages
Critics and readers generally agree on the importance of nature in the adventures of huckleberry finn, where it juxtapose against the civilization. The book itself represents mankind’s return to nature, seeking refuge from the suffocating bounds of societal standards: “Huck Finn, like other Adamic heroes in the canonical literature, flees the restrictions imposed by home and family in order to seek freedom on the great river”( Wright). Wright compares the character of Huck Finn to Biblical Adamic heros; heros carrying the torch of “individualism” and on a odyssey seeking to escape the oppression and reveal the injustice civilization imposes on the individual. Therefore, Wright reveals, in civilization’s attempt to civilize its constituent,
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