What Is The Theme Of Morality In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn

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Huckleberry Finn is a rebellious boy who defies the rules whenever he deems it fit. In the satirical novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, a runaway boy befriends an escaped slave in the deep south. The majority of society frowns upon Huck and his choices and he struggles with his decisions the whole novel which reveals thematic subjects such as friendship, love, and betrayal. Throughout the story Huck cannot decide whether to do the right thing or not, but ultimately his heart wins over the views forced upon him by society. From the start, Huck rejects the societal role placed upon him. Huck fights the strict moral and religious systems forced upon him by Miss Watson. “Huckleberry--why don’t you try to behave?...I didn’t mean no harm...all I wanted was a change” (Twain 2). Huck yearns to be free, but Miss Watson forces him to become a ‘good boy.’ When Huck doesn’t follow what Miss Watson is trying to teach him she gets angry, “She said it was wicked to say what I said,” but Huck doesn’t quite grasp the concepts Miss Watson is attempting to teach (Twain 2). Huck later says he would rather be in the bad place than comply with the strict rules and teaching that others deem appropriate for him. All his life Huck is taught what is right and what is wrong. A critic for The Hartford Courant, mentions how Huck is trained since he is very young to believe in certain societal ordeals and how it relates to his entire moral compass. The whole study of Huck 's moral nature is as serious as it is amusing, his confusion of wrong as right and his abnormal mendacity, traceable to his training from …show more content…

Not being able to analyze his actions, Huck fails to recognize that he has taken a stand against a morally corrupt society.

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