Huck Finn Civilization Essay

808 Words2 Pages

Mason Richardson
Mrs. Franks
English AP III
April 1, 2014
The Downfalls of “Civilization”
Throughout the novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huckleberry Finn challenges the meaning of being civilized by being morally good with only self-guidance and nature to rely on. Mark Twain was born in Florida, Missouri in 1835, and spent most of his young life near the Mississippi River just as Huck did. Twain’s father died when he was 12 and Huck’s father also died when he was young. Twain expressed Huck’s sense of adventure and fortune through his travels to the holy land and his interests in South American treasure. Twain served for the Confederacy during The Civil War, but was persuaded to leave by his brother, putting him on the path of becoming an author. In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain, Twain emphasizes that the traditional definition of being civilized does not apply to Huck by shaping Huck’s morals through survival and nature.
In Lord of the Flies the castaway children are similar to Huck Finn, whereas once they were deprived of civilization they began to do what they believed was right, implying that the common idea of civilization is only “skin deep.”("An overview of Lord of the Flies"). Jack followed his instincts to hunt and survive without order or reason, as soon as he was released from the influence of society. Ralph relied on order and plans to handle issues such as keeping the signal fire alive, and doing what needed to be done on a daily basis. All of the boys but Ralph and Piggy joined Jack because they believed that Jack was more powerful than Ralph, and that his power would keep them safe. Jack had an inner conflict, after Jack’s group of boys killed Piggy, whether or not to joi...

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...e novel, and protects him from white slave society. The flaws of civilization is a much more reasonable theme for the novel rather than slavery, for it does not only affect America and one race, but the world as a whole. Society plants the seeds of corruption in the populous by shaping people through false ideas, and agendas. The true meaning of being civilized is not manners or rules but doing what one thinks is right through instinct instead of “equating manners for morals.” ("Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn").
Overall, in the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain is implying that Huck is not the average person who goes with the false ideas of civilized society, but an individual enlightened by nature who rebels against those false agendas by escaping its influence and creating his own moral decisions through self guidance and nature.

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