Huckleberry Finn: A Sound Heart And A Deformed Conscience

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A Sound Heart and a Deformed Conscience
“Society can plant racist thoughts into the mind and instills a certain homogeneous model of behaviour into an individual, but ultimately it is one’s morals and perceptions of right and wrong that control the actions of a person.”

The most invisible and enigmatic force behind our actions, ideas and beliefs is societal influence. Since the dawn of modern civilization humans have looked to each other as examples of how they should treat each other and themselves, and this enormous dependance on others has lead to some of the biggest tragedies in the world including the oppression of people based on their religion, their gender or their race. Society can plant racist thoughts into the mind and instills a certain homogeneous model of behaviour into an individual, but ultimately it is one’s morals and perceptions of right and wrong that control the actions of a person. In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain gives society the example of a young boy that is able to change his preconceived ideas on race and slavery through the character …show more content…

At the beginning of the novel, Huck is as ignorant and unaware of the faults of society as any other person in his life and quite guilty of perpetuating the behaviour that oppressed black people because of the ideas society had placed

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