Theme Of Racism In Huck Finn

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I had been familiar with The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn since 10th grade when my English teacher had our class answer questions about passages from the book. My 10th grade teacher handed out three different copies of the same passage, each from a different edition of the book. Each one of these copies changed the “n-word” to “slave” and “robot” in order to make the word choices more appropriate for modern readers. When I heard that we would be reading Huck Finn in 11th grade, I was not sure if I fully equipped to handle the racial tension that Twain wove throughout the novel. Having never experienced extreme forms of racism, I knew that this book would make me empathize with the characters and shatter the shell of innocence of that lingered …show more content…

I think he makes this authorial decision because he is trying to capture the blatantly racist society that existed when the book was written. The major controversy around this idea is that Twain is partially misrepresenting the way slaves were referred to in the 19th century. Twain pairs the word, “Jim” to go hand in hand with n-word, and either word could replace the other. Huck interchanges Jim with the n-word when he says, “Miss Watson’s big n-word, named Jim, was setting in the kitchen door” (Twain 5). In Huck Finn, Twain writes Huck’s character frequently calling Jim not by his own name but by the n-word, which forcefully dehumanizes him. Each time I came across these instances in the book, although the word instinctively made me cringe, I tried to remind myself that for a boy of Huck’s age, nature, and location, this terrible word did not have it’s present day connotations. It was simply the only word Huck would have been taught to call African Americans at the time. Twain attempted to take away part of the deep hurt and meaning behind this heavy-handed word by overusing this word. During the beginning of Huck Finn, every time Jim was called the n-word I was extremely shocked that a book with this much horrid language could be published. After hearing Jim repeatedly be called the n-word I started to become slightly more comfortable with that nasty word. In our class, the uttering of “n-word” …show more content…

American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing as good since” (Hemingway). Most pieces of American literature created after Huck Finn reflects ideas and themes that Mark Twain introduced in Huck Finn. Mark Twain incorporates major themes such as: coming to consciousness, loss of innocence, exploring the frontier, relationship with nature, and searching for your identity in Huck Finn, which are the quintessential aspects of American literature. I believe that Huck Finn has major importance today because many of the major conflicts that are going on in the book, are still active today but are less extreme. Another connection I made was that both Huck and American went through time of difficulty and made adaptions to prevent it from happening again. Also it shows making changes take a lot of work, and this book helps expose issues to people, which guide people to change. Another major importance of Huck Finn is that when students are uncomfortable it helps them learn, and prevents issues from happening

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