The Importance Of Mark Twain's Genius

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The Importance of Twain’s Genius Controversy involving the use of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in high school curriculum has continued to break out across the nation. Many people believe that because of the use of vulgar language and racist connotation that the board of education in high schools should ban the novel from their core curriculum; however, this novel shows value and supports positive change from a racist society to an equal social environment. Mark Twain actually portrayed a historically accurate setting by using the vulgar language he used. He also portrays Jim as an admirable character with similar characteristics to that of a white person in the South in order to depict the idea that he was as much of a human as a Southern …show more content…

Their illiteracy, superstitions, love for adventure, cunning nature, and similar desire to run away from society’s morals brought them closer together in their friendship; however many people tend to overlook this aspect of the novel and its importance. These similarities prove to be significant as they spark Huck’s overall realization that black people, like Jim, are just as much human as the everyday Southern white man. Huck realizes this when he learns about the aspects of Jim’s dark past. When he lived with his wife and kids, Jim beat his daughter for not listening to what he asked of her when, in reality, she couldn’t hear his requests from the damage scarlet fever had done to her body. Huck described his realization about the misery and sorrow Jim felt when he said, “He was thinking about his wife and children, away up yonder, and he was low and homesick; because he hadn't ever been away from home before in his life; and I do believe he cared just as much for his people as white folks does their'n. It don't seem natural, but I reckon it's so" (141-142). Here, Huck realized that Jim felt as much emotion for his family as a white man would for his. Twain tries to show, through Huck’s understanding of the similarities between the two races, that Jim is just as much of a human as a white man, backing the equality of blacks and whites. He falsifies the social stereotype that a black slave didn’t feel the same emotions and act the same way white people

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