Summary Of Dances With Wolves In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn

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History has shown us time and time again how influential society can be. Society played a huge role in the treatment of minority groups, whether swaying people towards discrimination or towards acceptance, and separation from that influence allowed some to bypass initial perceptions and develop real relationships with minority races. Novels and movies have shown this situation, in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck was able to create a relationship with Miss Watson’s black slave, Jim. In the movie Dances With Wolves, Lieutenant John Dunbar was able to develop an almost familiar bond with the local Sioux Indian tribe. Both Huck and Dunbar had society working against them, unlike John Brown who was born into a progressive family who saw that Blacks were not inferior to whites.
At the start of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, Huck saw Jim as just any other black: not as valuable as any white, good for work, and someone who could be messed with because they believed in trifle things like “witches” (Twain 6). These were common beliefs at the time and the treatment was accepted. Huck had been with the …show more content…

During his journey to Fort Sedgewick, Timmons freely shared his opinion of Indians: “They’re nothing but thieves and beggars.” Dunbar had no prior experience with Indians and therefore had nothing else to go off of but Timmon’s opinion and the collective views of society. While at Fort Sedgewick on his own, Dunbar was able to interact with and learn from a tribe of Sioux indians. He soon comes to figure out for himself that what he was told of Indians was not true, at least for this particular tribe. “Nothing I have been told about these people is correct. They are not thieves or beggars. They are not the bogeymen they are made out to be. On the contrary, they are polite guests and I enjoy their humor” (Dances with

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