Saturday, October 12, 2019
Free Essays - Language and Dialect in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn :: Adventures Huckleberry Huck Finn Essays
      Language and Dialect in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn                 Mark Twain's use of language and dialect in  the book "Adventures of     Huckleberry Finn" helped him to bring about the overall feel that he     conveyed throughout the book, allowing him to show Huck Finn's attitudes     and beliefs concerning the nature of education, slavery, and family  values.                 When the story begins, Huck is seen as a young  boy who is not very     educated nor wishes to be. He does not seem to care very much for the     attention that is given to him by the Widow Douglas, who had taken him in     for her son, and her sister, Miss Watson. Huck's moral values were not  only     the product of his ignorance, but there is relation seen between Huck's     attitude and the attitude of his father when Huck is confronted by him.     Huck's father is disgusted at the way that Huck seems to be becoming more     and more civilized. He states "...they say you can read and write. You     think you're better'n your father, now, don't you, because he can't?"     Perhaps this statement shows disgust in Huck through not following the     moral values of his father, or perhaps this is just merely jealousy on  his     father's part. Huck's father warns Huck about going to school any more,  yet     Huck goes anyway, showing great willpower in the character of Huck in  that     he was gaining an education that he never really wanted in the first  place,     but soon came to realize that it was something actually useful, and in  the     fact that he was disobeying his father's orders.                 Huck's feelings about slavery are shown when  he helps Jim, Miss     Watson's slave, to escape. Huck's constant statement that "Jim talks like     he is white inside" shows that Huck was unique amongst the society in  which     he lived in the fact that he saw beneath the color of a person's skin and     saw the person that was truly there. Jim seems to be the only person that     Huck can trust other than Tom Saywer, Huck's best friend. Huck Finn felt     that slavery was a cruel injustice because he had gotten to know Jim and     found out that there was more to him than just being a slave. Huck had     found that Jim was a human being just like himself.  					    
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