Rhetorical Analysis Of Huckleberry Finn

1162 Words5 Pages

Tone (3 tone words with supporting quotations & explanations [identifying specific words & phrases used as evidence]): 1. “...would squeeze his hand on his forehead and stagger back and kind of moan; next he would sigh, and next he’d let on to drop a tear” (Twain 154). Parts of the novel offer some comic relief, even if there is a serious tone, but it is supposed to satirize the situations that occur when you are ignorant. This humorous yet serious tone is illustrated through the phrases and words: sigh, tear, and stagger back. Sigh and tear are incorporated to illustrate to the reader the emotion that the Duke is attempting to demonstrate and the efforts that he is putting into his reenactment. Stagger back is included to serve as …show more content…

Twain illustrates the critical tone by including words and phrases such as cover up, n*gger, and people could tell. The phrase cover up and n*gger illustrate the fear Huck has which develops from the ideals of his society. Huck acknowledges that his Antebellum society thinks that harboring Jim is bad judgement on his behalf so he tries to hide Jim so no conflicts rise due to his race. People could tell is incorporated in the quote in order to illustrate that the thoughts and ideals of what others think does have some wright to it and that he is not in a position to fully take care of someone else, especially when that someone else is a runaway …show more content…

Since he is the one that describes all of the events and situations that he encounters, everything that occurs in the novel has influences from his perspective. Huck is uneducated fourteen year old boy that lives in St. Petersburg in the 1840s. His perspective illustrates instances where that mindset shines through since he does not know anything other than what society wants him too. Due to how the Antebellum era influences Huck, he is an unreliable narrator-one who is not capable of understanding the significance of the events that he comments on and describes. He is not intentionally unreliable, however because he does not receive a full education and is not a many yet, he is not capable of proving the full perspective on major issues that he encounters. The humor that is present in the first few chapters of the novel some from how Huck does not fully understand the “sivilized” ways of the adults around him. The novel is written in the past tense in order for people to acknowledge that is a recent perspective of his encounters. Huck is not just an observer, he also participates in the events and makes his own decisions based on what he deems to be right and not what society deems as so. Huck is included in order for Twain to voice his own opinions and ideas about society, which is why Huck encounters many of the situations that he does. Huck is an innocent boy that