Huckleberry Finn Influence On Classic American Literature

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Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn has been one of the centerpieces of controversy in required reading debates throughout the U.S. Huck Finn has been a staple of American classrooms for decades and should remain as such for the foreseeable future. This masterful novel can be better understood in a guided, academic setting, is an integral part of the foundation of American writing, and explores the complex morals and themes of our country’s history in a deft and well thought out manner and as such should remain on required reading lists and in the hands of children and teens across the country. Classic American literature, especially that which inspires controversy, can be difficult to grasp fully. Guidance can help prevent much It was one of the first novels to use a dialectal style to help convey persona, as well as being one of the first to feature a child narrator to discuss societal issues and conventions through a lense of innocence and naivete. (Fishkin) Twain uses these devices masterfully and effectively and as such they show up throughout literature after Huck Finn. A Clockwork Orange and The Color Purple are two incredibly well known examples of dialectal writing and protagonists ranging from children to teenagers are featured examining and even fighting against societal issues in a multitude of novels today, although recently most notably in the genre of dystopia. Much, if not all books using such ideas owe Twain, and specifically this book, their stylistic format. Twain was also a front runner in longer pieces of satirical writing. It developed mostly out of necessity due to the pressures and ideals present during his time, this way to mock society by holding up a mirror and was often so cleverly implemented that if people didn’t want to read about how flawed their morals were, they’d completely miss that major point in the book. While many books take a page out of Twain’s, the most famous This makes it a not only reasonable required reading for school children, but a valuable and, perhaps even, necessary

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