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Huckleberry Finn's Personas
An analysis of the various literary interpretations of the Huckleberry Finn character in Mark Twain's novel "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn". -- 1,885 words; APA

"The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
An analysis of the survival strategies used by Huckleberry Finn in Mark Twain's " The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn". -- 1,150 words; MLA

Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
This paper is a character analysis of Huckleberry Finn, the protagonist of Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn", emphasizing Huck's humaneness and love of freedom. -- 1,125 words;

"Huckleberry Finn"
An analysis of the novel "Huckleberry Finn" written by Mark Twain. -- 1,249 words; MLA

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
This paper offers an analysis of Mark Twain's the 'Adventures of Huckleberry Finn'. -- 1,609 words; MLA

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HUCELBERRY FINN

Epiphany 
In Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, the values of Huck and Jim traveling down the
Mississippi River are contrasted against those of the people residing in the southern
United States. Twain satirically portrays organized religion and society's morals
throughout the novel. The freedom and tranquillity of the river gives way to the deceit,
greed and prejudice of the towns lying on the shore of the river, causing them to
disguise themselves and keep their identities hidden. These two runaways - one a slave,
the other a beaten boy - attempt to build a sanctuary from civilization upon their raft,
but the influence of the shore values continue to find their way into the thoughts,
actions and feelings of both Huck and Jim, which becomes the major theme of this novel. 
While traveling down the Mississippi upon the raft, Huck and Jim's sense of freedom
subordinated all others. Jim was a runaway nigger (Mark Twain, pg. 89) running from the
law, yet he was free, while on the raft, to live and think as any white man. According to
the rest of society, Huck was dead, murdered and thrown into the Mississippi; but on the
raft he was alive. Both lived an idyllic life on the raft and as Huck put it, ...it's
lovely to live on a raft (Ibid., pg. 115). Later, when the Duke and Dauphin came aboard
and they agreed to all be friends, Huck was relieved and felt that everybody should
...feel right and kind towards the others... (Ibid., pg. 121) while living on a raft.
Throughout their travels on the raft, honesty, kindness and equality prevailed, but
whenever they touched shore, they encountered the deceit, greed, and cruelty of rural
Southern United States. 
The idyllic life on the raft was contrasted with the hatred, cruelty, and distrust felt
amongst the inhabitants of the shores of the Mississippi. Two feuding families, the
Grangerfords and the Sheperdsons, are a satirized look at the lives of Southerners and of
organized religion. The two families had been fighting for thirty years and no one knew
the reason. When Huck asked if it was caused by land, Buck Grangerford responded I reckon
maybe - I don't know (Ibid., pg. 105). Both families very hypocritically took guns to
church and discussed with a fervor the sermon reported by Huck to be all about brotherly
love (Ibid., pg. 106). Twain portrayed Mississippi River society to be a greedy,
distrustful civilization in which the values were all twisted and where the church was
more of a form of entertainment than a religion. 
Huck and Jim's 'Eden' upon the raft was breached when two frauds found their way onto it.
The Duke and Dauphin were continuously lying, deceiving and taking advantage of others.
The influence of these two was the cause of many unwanted encounters with the towns and
people along the Mississippi. Huck immediately realized they were ...just low-down
humbugs and frauds (Ibid., pg. 121). When Huck was able to slip away from the Duke and
Dauphin and resume his journey with Jim, he revealed his relief when he said it's ...so
good to be free again (Ibid., pg. 197). When the Duke and Dauphin returned, Huck
...wilted right down onto the planks ... and [gave] up... (Ibid., pg. 198), exposing his
dislike of the values which they brought onto the raft. The Duke and Dauphin provide an
insight into the lives and values of the shore, and a deep contrast between Jim and Huck
and the rest of society. 
Mark Twain contrasted the values of the shore and the river in a way which positively
portrayed the river values and the lives of Huck and Jim, and negatively and often
satirically, portrayed the values of rural Southern United States. Twain gave freedom to
Huck and Jim and showed that all races of humans share like feelings and should all be
treated as equals. Throughout the book Huck contends with the influence of society's
values and in the end makes a decision to embrace that of equality

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