The Nature of Hypocrisy in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

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Hypocrisy is simultaneously one of the most shameful and identifiable character flaws. Although it is fairly common to experience feelings of resentment toward a person who believes (or claims they believe) one thing and then acts incongruently with that belief, to accuse that person of being a hypocrite requires examination of one’s own inconsistencies before pointing a finger. Mark Twain, a brilliant and iconoclastic classic author, manipulates the paradoxical nature of hypocrisy in telling the story of Huckleberry Finn, an innocent-minded protagonist who encounters hypocritical characters frequently along his journey. When Twain’s reader notices through Huck’s eyes that an otherwise God-fearing, honorable person does something immoral without questioning his or her actions, it encourages the reader to reconsider his or her own transgressions. With a multitude of hypocritical characters in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain pokes at the reader’s conscience by catching their judgments and fostering a less-blind eye to one’s own iniquities.
From the very beginning of the novel, there is an air of phoniness to the environments Huck is raised in, and his upbringing is the foundation for his ability to observe others’ discrepancies. He dislikes the stuffy rules in Widow Douglas’s home because they make little reasonable sense to him - for instance, Widow Douglas will not let him smoke because it is “a mean practice” and not “clean,” yet she chews tobacco, which Huck scoffs is alright because “she done it herself” (12). Huck observes little duplicities like this, yet does not judge them outright. And as uncomfortable as he was with the uptight style of living with Widow Douglas, he also finds little solace in the woods with t...

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...m down the river and frees him in her will (276). This is Twain exposing the hypocrisy of every do-gooder white southerner who never thinks twice about owning slaves; this is him attacking the very social construct of the South through an emotionally-tugging story.
Through equal supplement of lovable and despicable characters that all have some measure of hypocrisy, Mark Twain makes it clear that a dose of it, big or small, is unavoidable for nearly everyone. However, he does not excuse hypocrisy, but rather he demonstrates the negative consequences of failing to practice what one preaches, along with examples of how to both believe and act with integrity through Huck and Jim. Twain takes an uncomfortable idea that no one wants to discuss and tackles it from every instance, insisting it be addressed if nowhere else then at least between the reader and his story.

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