Racism in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

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In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, events throughout the novel suggest that Huck is a racist to Jim, Miss Watson’s runaway slave, whether he knows it or not. Despite the fact that Huck travels with Jim, he does not care about freeing Jim from slavery. As a result, Twain’s purpose is more focused on the adventures Huck and Jim experience rather than freeing Jim.
Throughout the novel, Huck travels with Jim although he never has a plan to free him. First off, Huck runs away from his Pap, and Jim runs away from Miss Watson, who tries to sell Jim as slave. They meet on Jackson’s Island and spend some time there on the island but when a search team is sent to look for Huck, the pair heads south for a long novel of aimless travel. Upon their travels, Jim and Huck encounter two criminals, who both claim to be of some royalty (one a king, the other a duke). In their first encounter, the King and the Duke ask Huck if Jim is a runaway he says “Goodness sakes! Would a runaway nigger run south?” (113). When Huck says this lie to the King and the Duke, he is showing he has no intentions of freeing Jim. This is because if Huck did have intentions of freeing Jim, Huck would lead Jim north to a slave free state, especially since Missouri borders Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska and Kansas, all of which were free territories. Not to mention conditions only get worse for slaves the further south they went. Second of all, later in the novel, the King and the Duke sell Jim back into slavery. At this point, Huck can no longer deal with the two criminals, so he abandons them. Huck is upset that Jim is gone, so he decides that he must come up with a plan and free Jim. Huck eventually finds out where Jim is, which just happens to be at Tom Sawyer’s Aun...

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... come around from his racist ways. Huck only cares about going around and having adventures, not freeing Jim from slavery. When he finally tries to free Jim from slavery, he only does so because Jim is captive and he has no one to spend time with. If Huck really cared about Jim as much as he did adventuring, he would have traveled north into Illinois where Jim would have been safe.

Works Cited

Lester, Julius. “Morality and the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: A Case Study in Critical Controversy. Ed. Graff, Gerald, and James Phelan. Boston and New York: Bedford Books of St. Martin’s Press, 1995. 349-359. Print.
Smiley, Jane. “Say It Ain’t So, Huck” Harper’s Magazine Jan. 1996: 61-67. Print.
Walrath, Norma. “Huckleberry Finn” “Rationales for Commonly Challenged Taught Books.” Connecticut English Journal 15.1 (1983): 145-148. Print

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