Huckleberry Finn And Langston Hughes Comparison

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Comparison of Huck There are many writers that convey their purposes using different methods. Many writers use different techniques to persuade their audience towards a specific idea in their writing. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain tells the story about a boy named Huck, who takes on many adventures along with Jim, a runaway slave. Throughout their journey, Huck starts to realize that African Americans are much the same as white Americans. He sees that the treatments of African Americans is wrong and cruel. Huck’s view on African Americans changes through the course of the novel because Twain introduces his idea of racism being immoral through the different uses of techniques. Writers like Walt Whitman, Brent Staples, Langston …show more content…

Langston Hughes is a writer that has written many beautiful poems that impact people differently. In the poem I, Too by Langston Hughes, he discusses the racial treatment of the african americans, the dream of equality, and how racism treats society. In his writing he uses ethos, repetition, allusion to persuade the audience of his idea of racism in the poem. In both Hughes’ and Twain's writings, they use allusion as their technique, but they also differ in some other techniques. In Hughes’ poem he describes from the point of view of the african american. The African American is treated unequally based on his race when he says “I, too, sing America” (Hughes). The allusion that Hughes makes in his poem is a reference to the poem I Hear America Singing by Walt Whitman. This reference to Whitman's poem is about all white Americans living a happy life, but it does not show the african americans perspectives. Hughes’ technique of using allusion in his poem demonstrates the racism through unequal representation. In all of Mark Twain’s different uses of techniques he incorporates the use of allusion in his novel. When Huck and Jim are on the raft they discuss about topics that would pass the time, although Twain uses the technique of allusion to show racism. When the two strike up conversation about King Solomon, Jim argues with Huck that the king was not intelligent because he says “I doan k’yer what de widder say, he warn’t no wise man...he had some er de dad-fetchedes’ ways...does you know ‘bout dat chile dat he ‘uz gwyne chop in two?’(73). Twain’s reference to King Solomon shows Jim’s stubbornness to admit that he could be wrong about the king, it also represents racial stereotypes about african americans being ignorant and stubborn. Though in the conversation between Huck and Jim, Twain strays away from the racial stereotypes by giving Jim an intelligence that most slaves do not have and shows that

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