How Does Huck Mature In Huckleberry Finn

726 Words2 Pages

In the beginning of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck is a very naïve boy. He has no exposure to anything outside of the safety of his home and school. Throughout the course of the book, Huck goes on an adventure south to try to find freedom for his guardian’s slave, Jim. On this adventure, Huck is exposed to life on his own, but more importantly, to life with a runaway slave. This novel is a bildungsroman, or a coming of age story. As Huck grows in maturity, one specific area of growth he experiences is independence. Huck’s first bold move toward independence of a physical kind is early in the book when Huck runs away from his dad’s cabin in the woods where he has been kept. Huck shows his independence from society when he is able to steal food and fake his own death in order to escape his father. When he is on the river in the …show more content…

Later in the book, Huck shows his growing independence by cleverly dressing as a girl and going into town to try and gather information about himself, whom everybody assumes is dead. Right after Huck escapes from his father, he thinks “I knowed I was alright now. Nobody else would come a-hunting after me.” (97) This shows that Huck knows what’s going on and that he has everything under control.
Fournier 2Through Huck and Jim being together, Huck makes a decision for himself to be independent from social norms and see Jim as his friend too. When Huck and Jim are together on their raft, Jim says that Huck is “de bes’ fren’ Jim’s ever had; en you’s de ONLY fren’ ole Jim’s got now.” (222) This shows the reader that Huck has broken off from social norms because he views Jim as person, not just as a slave. This is evident because Huck doesn’t turn Jim in in the first place, and he is always worried about Jim in the times when they are separated from each other on their journey south. Huck declares his spiritual

Open Document