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Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn

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The Adventure of Huckleberry Finn
The Adventure of the Huckleberry Finn is a famous novel written by Mark Twain that depicts the adventures that Huck, a white boy, and Jim, a runaway slave, have gone through during their journey to escape for freedom. The storyline centers around three main characters: Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, and Jim. Huck is a white boy that has a lower position in the society. Many people in the town consider Huck as “unsivilized”. In contrast, Tom Sawyer is a white boy who has a higher position in the society compares with Huck. Jim is a slave that has the lowest position in the society. In Huck and Jim’s journey, numerous incidents happen. The feud between the Grangerfords and the Shepherdson families, the Royal Nonesuch, …show more content…

Mark Twain uses Huck and Jim’s experiences and realizations of the ugly side of the society to satirize the behaviors of the religious hypocrites, the practice of slavery and racism, and the gullibility of the people.
The contrasting behaviors of the Grangerfords, the Shepherdsons, Miss Watson, Uncle Silas, and Aunt Sally, with their religious beliefs, make Huck questions the religious sensibilities of the society. In Huck’s society, most of the people are Christians. As Christians, the people are expected to fully devote themselves to God. The Christianity teachings emphasize on the idea of brotherly love. In order to for people to go to heaven, they need to treat others kindly. However, many of the people in Huck’s society are religious hypocrites where their behaviors contradict with the Christianity teachings. At the beginning of the novel, Huck describes Miss Watson as a Christian lady who believes that she will go to heaven after she dies (4). As a Christian, Miss Watson’s behavior of owning a slave contradicts with the ideologies of Christianity. Other than Miss Watson, the way in which Uncle Silas and Aunt Sally …show more content…

The people in the society show their gullibility when they are deceived by the king’s fake story of being a pirate that wishes to guide the other pirates in the Indian Ocean into the true path. The king makes up the story in order to get sympathy from the audience. When the king finished his story, everyone’s eyes’ are filled with tears. The king pretends to be a nice person where he goes around to say thank you to the people that supported him (101-102). The incident shows the gullibility of the people since they easily believed in the king’s lie. Another incident that shows the gullibility of the people is when the king and the duke trick the people in the town to believe that they are the Wilks brothers. The duke and the king got their plan of pretending to be the Wilks brothers when they encounter Reverend Elexander Blodgett. Blodgett tells the duke all the information about the Wilks family members. With the information provided by Blodgett, the king and the duke are able to deceive the people in the town. When the doctor points out that the two of them are frauds that are trying to get the Peter Wilk’s heritage, no one in the town believes in the doctor. Huck describes, “They crowded around the doctor and tried to quiet him down, and tried to explain to him and tell him how Harvey’d showed in forty ways that he was Harvey” (130). This quote shows that the people in the

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