How Did Huckleberry Finn Change Society

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This book that has been written for very good reasons and it changed society in the 1800’s to today. The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is set in the South of the Antebellum era or the Plantation Era. A boy named Huckleberry Finn has faked his death to escape his abusive dad and was tagged along with a slave named Jim who is running away to the north to become a free man. Huck and Jim go through different dilemmas which shows a lot of themes that Mark Twain embedded. The story shows themes of facing reality, overcoming self-morals, and fulfillment.

Huck Finn is out of his environment and is now interfered by many strangers. Two of the strangers he encounters are the con men or so called the Duke and the Dauphin, and they do …show more content…

Jim has despised white people since he was born. The slave age has took a toll on how black people feel about them and Huck has changed the point of view for Jim. He had to trust Huck and since he has seen that a white person can show compassion and respect to him, Jim could actually give his trust to Huck. "Dah you goes, de ole true Huck; de on'y white genlman dat ever kep' his promise to ole Jim" (Twain 81). Twain shows a relationship and equality to both individual which he wanted the audience to know that everyone is the same, and have the same rights and feelings even if a person has different colored skin. Another person is the doctor who treated Tom Sawyer. The doctor saw Jim as a considerate person when he helped him with the bullet in Tom’s leg which led to a situation where Jim’s life was at stake, and the doctor said “the nigger never made the least row nor a word from the start. He ain’t no bad nigger, gentlemen” (Twain 254). The Doctor could of made Jim go back in confinement and maybe even killed since he escaped with Tom and Huck, but he overcame the situation and his own morals to save Jim and eventually make him a free man. Huck has been living with the Widow since his last adventure with Tom Sawyer and he wants to change for the better good, “At first I hated School, but by and by I got so I could stand it. So the longer I went to school the easier it got to be. I was getting sort of used to the Widow’s way, too” (Twain 14). Huck wants to conform and he had to break his own morals to be head and shoulders above for himself and the

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