Friday, May 31, 2019

societhf Values of Society :: Adventures Huckleberry Huck Finn Essays

Huckleberry Finn Values of Society   Often in satire, writers will use the internal conflict of a face to symbolically criticize the values and morality of society. In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark two uses the main character of Huckleberry Finn and the conflict between his personality and social moral sense to criticize society. In this clash between his deformed conscience and sound heart, his heart is victorious. This conflict reflects the major themes within this work of slavery, racism, and civilized society. With a perfect(a) examination of this conflict and insight into these facets of Huck these facts become apparent to the reader.   It is clear that throughout The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck is a character bearing a deformed conscious. Hucks misshapen sense of morals is a direct result of his dysfunctional upbringing. To better understand this let us first examine the background of Huck that Twain gives the reader. The Widow Douglas she took me for her son (1). An insightful reader can see from this that Huck is not receiving a mainstream childhood. Hucks father is a drunk, his mother is dead, and he is forced to sleep together with a widowed woman and her self-righteous sister. Given such conditions it easy to see why Huck rejects the morals of a society that has rejected him in the sense that he is not protected from his father. Hucks distorted sense of morals is also a product of selectively accepting precepts that have been instilled into him based on his own intelligence. In a humorous passage Huck describes his feelings towards religion. Then she Miss Watson told me all about the bad place hell, and I said I wished I was there...all I wanted was a change (2). Clearly Huck misunderstands the tenants of Christianity yet his motives were not malicious. Huck was merely expressing his desire to free himself of his current situation. He sees beyond the values of a hypocritical societ y and chooses to follow his own path. These misunderstandings of, and weak feelings of responsibility toward his faith have a distorted impact on his conscience. In variance to the religious beliefs of Miss Watson are the morals of his father.

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