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    demonstrated. In Mark Twain’s classic‚ The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‚ the main characterHuck Finn‚ is greatly influenced by his jaded father‚ Pap Finn. Through Pap’s actions he becomes worthless in the eyes of young Huck. Twain uses Pap’s abusive and absurd behavior to emphasize Huck’s desison making in his transition into adulthood‚ and to show hope for Huck’s future. Youth‚ hope‚ and change are all the things that Huck represents and Pap is against. Pap is what one would consider a resentful

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    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is a classic novel about a young boy named Huck Finn who goes on an adventure. The timeline that Mark Twain focuses on throughout the novel is during the time of the slave trade and the main plot of the story takes place on a journey going through the Mississippi river. Huck’s story starts out introducing him as a runaway kid with other characters such as Jim and the Grangerfords family‚ who had a strange tradition of killing a member from their rival

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    In the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain‚ the author depicts the protagonist as picaresque. Huck is a picaresque figure because he is adventurous‚ witty‚ and also because he is a dishonest‚ but appealing character. The author shows Hucks adventurous side early in the story when Huck and Tom decide to start their own gang. Well start this band of robbers and call it Tom Sawyers Gang . . . whichever boy was ordered to kill that person and his family must do it‚ ad he mustnt eat till he

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    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain has been criticized‚ censored‚ and banned for numerous reasons‚ including a very low grade of morality‚ rough dialect‚ and a systemic use of bad grammar among other accusations since it was published in 1885. In the 1950’s‚ the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) called it racist and blamed the novel for promoting black stereotypes. Public libraries consistently receive requests to remove this novel from shelves‚ and

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    Huck Finn’s Moral Changes   In the book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‚ the main character Huck Finn undergoes many moral changes. In the beginning of the book‚ Huck is wild and carefree‚ playing jokes and tricks on people and believing them all to be hilarious. When Huck’s adventures grow to involve more people and new moral questions never before raised‚ you can tell that he has started to change. By the time the book is almost over‚ people can see a drastic change in Huck’s opinions‚ thoughts

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    How Does Huck Finn Change

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    During the book Finn undergoes an HUGE change. His character arc is well thought out and it’s interesting seeing him evolve into someone different and undergo a change. I love dynamic characters in books and Finn delivers on that front. He becomes more engaged in the world around him‚ starts to speak with people‚ understands that he is not alone and that there are people whom he can talk to. He even takes the first steps to talking with a girl he has secretly been admiring. It’s also interesting

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    Satire and parody are two types of comedy that have been used all the way back to the era of Mark Twain. Satire resembles parody but it is critical and is used to educate or make a change. Parody is just poking fun at something with no purpose. The episode of the Simpson’s on the Odyssey was a perfect example of a parody. The clip of the "Do the Right Thing" is a good satire. It has a white man pronouncing how his favorite celebrities are all black but yet he still uses the word nigger. Afterwards

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    As Huck travels farther down the river‚ he learns to be more insightful and reflects on what society has taught him along with his own beliefs. One example of this is when Huck almost turns Jim in to the slave hunters out of the guilt he feels for helping a black man escape‚ something he was raised to believe was very sinful‚ but decides to protect Jim in the very last second. Huck sees Jim as an equal and a friend and comes to find that sometimes

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    published what would become one of the most controversial books in history‚ The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. A novel that began to raise questions on whether or not it should be taught in school because of its discussion of slavery‚ racism‚ and use of the n-word. Though it seems that those who want to sanitize or not allow the book to be read at all are missing the true message of it. Huck Finn enlightens us on what slavery and racism was like from a new perspective‚ it shows moral conflict‚ and

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    1800’s. Much like Huckleberry Finn‚ Daisy‚ coming from America did not want to conform to the norms of European society. She wanted to be her own individual. While reading Daisy Miller there were three common themes that arose which led me to believe that Daisy could be addressed as the female version of Huck Finn. Some of the themes include: the constant search for freedom‚ rejecting the norms of society‚ and the uncultured lifestyles that both tried to achieve. Huck Finn was in constant search of

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