Huckleberry Finn and Toni Morrison

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In Toni Morrison's essay, From Introduction to Adventures of Huckleberry Finn she talks about the issue of people wanting to remove Huckleberry Finn from public schools' reading lists and the libraries. Morrison raises the argument of race in this essay. This argument about race is one that still faces the world today. Morrison argues that because this argument is one that preoccupies us today we need to keep reading it. In her essay Morrison goes against the people who claim that Huckleberry Finn is racist. Morrison praises this book and holds it to the highest of standards. Morrison's opinion on this novel is made clear in her statement, “The brilliance of Huckleberry Finn is that it is the argument it raises” (pg 322).
In her essay Morrison dances around the idea that she thinks Huck is a lonely boy. Morrison states, “If the emotional environment into which Twain places his protagonist is dangerous, then the leading question the novel poses for me is, What does Huck need to live without terror, melancholy and suicidal thoughts? The answer, of course, is Jim.” (pg 322). With this statement, Morrison is drawing attention to the fact that with out Jim, Huck would be an emotional wreck. I agree with Morrison, in the sense that Huck is very dependent on his relationship with Jim in life.
“My fury at the maze of deceit, the risk of personal harm that a white child is forced to negotiate in a race-inflected society, is dissipated by the exquisite use to which Twain puts the maze, that risk.” In this statement Morrison is referring to the relationship between Jim and Huck. Mark Twain uses Huck and Tom as examples of how being raised in a racist society can affect white children. Huck is raised to be for slavery, yet while him and...

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...that are brought forth by society and Twain on the head. Morrison closes her essay by saying, “For a hundred years, the argument that this novel is has been identifies, reidentifies, examined, wages and advanced. What it cannot be is dismissed. It is classic literature, which is to say it heaves, manifests and last.” (pg323). I agree completely with Morrison's account of Huckleberry Finn. She touched all of the problem that society, and she her self, have/had with the book and addressed them all. I do not feel as if any other critic did Huckleberry Finn justice by giving a good account on the novel.

Works Cited
Reidhead, Julia. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. 8th Edition. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2012. 130-309. Print.
Reidhead, Julia. From Introduction to Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. 8th Edition. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2012. 321-323. Print.

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