Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn Essay

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the focus of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn cannot possibly be their relationship.
The most noticeable plot hole is Huck and Jim’s going South, when freedom was right across the river. This makes absolutely no sense, it is entirely impossible to pinpoint Twain’s motive in this plot twist - it can only be explained by a plot error. As Jane Smiley puts it, “The big plot hole forces the evasion sequence because Twain had to wrap it up, three years after he started the book” (2). This kind of illogical writing forces Twain’s hand: Jim has to in some way be sent back North to achieve freedom, so Twain wrote that in. Thus, he was taken way south to the Phelps’ jail cell and away from Huck, where he later going to brought back to his old master way up north (215-217), fulfilling Twain’s needs.
The evasion sequence follows after a three year break from writing, and in the jumble of plot, Twain realizes that Jim being brought back to his old master way up north would only place him into captivity once again. So Twain brings Huck and Tom into the story to find Jim and play “savior,” attempting to free him to the north, but …show more content…

Twain, as a satirist, is trying to do his job. He satirizes so beautifully - parallels between religion and superstition, calling out the stupid white man, challenging the beliefs of some racists, and showing them that black people can be better than whites in many ways. He intends for it to be a book of characters led by “sound heart[s] … [defeating] conscience” (Mark Twain in Kaplan, 314). But, overall, Twain overreaches with his book. There is too much going on, causing errors and extraneous detail; even a great satirist and writer like Twain can be overwhelmed. The three year time gap between the start and finish of this book was too much to overcome, and while truly, Twain has good intentions, the book fails at its satire of racist

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