Saturday, August 3, 2019
sathf Satire in Adventures of Huck Finn :: Adventures Huckleberry Huck Finn Essays
      Satire in Adventures of Huck Finn           The dominant tone of this work is satire. Twain pokes fun at many of      the aspects of Southern life in the 19th century (including slavery and  feuds),      and several characters as well.  His fiery attitude about the ills of  society     shows itself from the first page of this book.                   I think that one of the main  themes in this novel is the conflict between      the society's "good" and "bad". Huck believed that a person was "good" if       they were educated, well read, religiously trained, and had the ability to  follow      rules. This, of course, is not the true nature of "goodness", and a key  element      in Twain's satire. In fact, Huck, who is one of the only good characters in  the      novel, believes good is based on the elements of dangers which face him     every day, and due to this dicotomy, does not believe he is "good". This     becomes painfully evident when Huck meets the Gregfords. The Gregfords     are an obvious simile for pure evil. Though they have a temporal glow to  them,     after all, they are rich and aristocratic. However their misdeeds flow     contrary to society's label of "good" . He labels them as "good", though  after     he hears their story behind their feud, he realizes that they are not quite  as      good as he had believed. This shows the tumultuous journey between the  "good"     and "evil" occuring in Huck's mind.                   The most clear occasion of this is  when Huck dresses as a girl to     steal things from the neighborhood store. On a metaphorical level, this     shows Twain's alternate sexual preference (Freud pointed this out in     "The Human Mind, Second Edition") -- he is living vicariously through his     creations. Twain uses the visage of Huck as a girl to ameliorate it  against     the society's "evil" perspective, in an attempt to popularize these acts.     The bifurcation between his personal "good" and society's "good" is a key     point in the book, and a universal theme which is best observed in this  scene.                   Another important scene which goes  along with this same theme was     the scene with Huck Finn and his gang in the cave in the end of the  second     					    
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