Theme Of Freedom In Huck Finn

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In the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, freedom is portrayed from the perspective of two characters in the book: Huck Finn and an escaped slave, Jim. They travel together along the Mississippi River and their characters develop throughout the journey. Twain develops Huck’s character by the choices he makes as the novel progresses and he goes through many changes. Huck struggles with racial values that has been taught to him by the white adults in his life, they collide with the feelings he has towards Jim, a slave who gradually becomes his friend over the course of their journey down the river to freedom and is forced to reevaluate his point of view on slavery. There are many turning points in their relationship which contributes to Huck’s rejection of society’s false beliefs: when Huck promises Jim that he will not tell anyone that he has run away, when Huck decides to keep his promise despite what his conscience it telling him to do, and also when Huck decides to risk all the guilt he will feel by helping Jim find his freedom from is enslaved life. Twain uses the ideas of freedom in contrast to slavery, and civilization against modern society. These moments show Huck’s growth as an actual person, which corresponds along his isolation of rejection from society and its’ morals.
First when Huck runs away from his abusive father, Pap, who kidnapped him, is when Huck happens to run into the slave Jim, who has also run away from his owner after he overheard that his owner was planning to sell him. Huck asks Jim how he came to be there upon the island, Jim confesses that he has run away. Huck is shocked that someone could do such an immoral thing. Jim asks him not to tattle, and Huck says: “I said I wouldn’t, and I’ll sti...

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... almost over, there is a profound change in Huck’s opinions, thoughts and his views of right vs. wrong. Huck found a friend who helped Huck change himself for the better version of him. Jim reached in Huck and pulled out an independent, moral being. And lastly, Huck sees Jim not as a slave, or as a runaway but as a human being who loves his family. Huck disregards skin color, race and social status and sees Jim for who he truly is, a good man. In the end, Huck kept his promise to Jim, as he said he would even though throughout their journey he struggled with it. This shows that all along, Huck had compassion, a soul, the ability to find friendship and freedom, find his independence, and have thoughts apart from what society thinks. Mark Twain teaches us through the course of the novel that friendship and a good heart overpowers the influences society throws upon us.

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