Inhumanity In Huck Finn Analysis

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Marion Anderson once said, “Fear is a disease that eats away at logic and makes man inhuman.” Fear and insecurity fuels the prejudice that is used in man’s inhumanity to others. Even if not for the sake of being inhumane, man criticizes man for lack of compassion; however, it is in nature that men are inhumane to others especially in times of fear and insecurity. As Mark Twain exemplifies in his work, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, man’s inhumanity to man, is due to the fear, prejudice, insecurity, and selfishness that every man has experienced in society.
The family feud between the Grangerford and Shepherdson families is an example of how fear and prejudice influence man’s unfair treatment of man. When Huckleberry Finn is separated to the
Twain satirizes this concept about fearfulness that often leads to the inhumanity to man and hypocrisy. Huck shows confusion while describing his experience with the Grangerfords. He sees that they want to be good people; however, they would do anything to anyone if it is in their own interest. For instance, when Buck shoots and Harney from behind a bush, Col. Grangerford, Buck’s father, said, “‘I don’t like that shooting from behind a bush. Why, didn’t you step into the road, my boy?’” (Twain 111). This gives insight to what the characters really value, pride, but at the cost of one’s safety to bring harm to another due to fear and selfishness. Twain uses the Grangerford and Shepherdson feud to show that man, as a whole, tends to be inhumane to man due to selfishness and fear. The mistreatment of man by man can also be portrayed in the times in which lynching mobs are formed out of fear, prejudice, and selfishness. One
Families show hatred due to fear and selfishness. People treat others wrong to avoid people from wronging themselves. Sometimes people con others to have the ability to survive and have their own happiness. Even children are susceptible so the nature of selfishness. Man’s selfishness, insecurity, prejudice, and fear is what holds the human race back from humanity. Mark Twain explains that man is crucial to man’s humanity. Not only is man inhumane to man in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, but also in the real

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