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    the perspective of Tom Sawyer’s best friend‚ Huck Finn follows his adventures as he travels down the Mississippi with his runaway slave friend Jim. Over the story‚ Huck’s relationship with Jim fluctuates‚ but does this relationship make Huck a moral person? Throughout all his experiences on the raft and on the land with JimHuck becomes a moral person‚ as shown by his relationship with Jim throughout the book. Near the beginning of the book‚ Huck sees Jim as a companion on this adventure‚ not caring

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    Throughout all of his adventures Jim shows compassion as his most prominent trait. He makes the reader aware of his many superstitions and Jim exhibits gullibility in the sense that he Jim always assumes the other characters in the book will not take advantage of him. One incident proving that Jim acts naive occurs halfway through the novel‚ when the Duke first comes into the scene "By right I am a duke! Jim’s eyes bugged out when he heard that..." In the novel‚ Huck Finn‚ one can legitimately

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    Growth of Huck Avery Frazier Jim is a slave. For most people living in this time period in the novel‚ that is about all there is to know about slavery. These next three paragraphs will explain how Huck and Jim’s relationship changes over time. Nobody really cares what about the slave’s feelings they’re just slaves to the white community people. Jim and Huck are both very unique‚ and complex characters. Huck’s attitude toward Jim changes from Huck thinking Jim is just property and an ignorant

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    Huck Finn and Jim Throughout The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‚ Mark Twain illustrates the bond formed between Huck‚ the young white protagonist‚ and Jim‚ Huck’s black companion. While Huck and Jim travel down the river it becomes apparent that Jim is more of a father figure to Huck than his biological father. Pap teaches the virtues of a life not worth living‚ while Jim gives Huck the proper fatherly support‚ compassion‚ and knowledge for Huck to become a man. Although Huck and Jim come from

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    the nature of Huck and Jim’s unusual relationship and the purpose that Jim‚ an African American former slave‚ serves in the novel. I believe the above quotation explains the reason Jim’s character is in the novel‚ by illustrating the moral shift in Huck’s beliefs. This shift is the turning point of Huck’s moral beliefs which he struggles with through the novel. It is clear after this situation that Huck no longer sees Jim as just a slave‚ and Jim’s purpose in the novel is to educate Huck on the immorality

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    The Bond Between Huck and Jim Friendship is one of the most coveted things in life. A good friend always going to be there when they need to be. In the novel‚ The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain‚ a runaway slave named Jim and a teenage boy named Huck face a multitude of challenges that will cause them to work together to survive. This leads to a very unlikely and dangerous relationship that they develop together. Over the course of the novel Huck and Jim’s relationship will grow from

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    Huck and Jim’s relationship is present throughout the novel. It is first seen when Jim risks being seen as a runaway slave when he goes to Jackson Island searching for Huck. This tells us that Jim cares about Huck and is risking his own life for him. Huck promises to help Jim escape the south and become a free man. Even though Huck is raised with racist views on the black part of society he is still willing to help Jim head towards freedom. Their relationship is based on friendship‚ but as time passes

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    parental guidance or support. Because of this‚ Huck leaves his father and finds Jim‚ Miss Watson’s household slave. Even though in the beginning of the novel‚ Huck sees Jim as nothing more than just a runaway slave who is accompanying him to embark on their journey down the Mississippi River to the town of Cairo together. As they travel‚ Jim becomes more apparent as a fatherly figure and a mentor to Huck in many ways throughout their journey. When Jim and Huck are still on Jackson’s island‚ they see a

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    includes an uncommon relationship that helps a reader understand the world of the antebellum South. When Huck Finn‚ a young‚ naive‚ lower-class white boy trying to escape his father finds Jim‚ a fugitive slave‚ their adventures present him with a renewed‚ more accurate perception of society. Stuck on a raft drifting down the Mississippi River‚ Huck and Jim learn many new things about their world as they pass by numerous people and towns. Their encounter on Jackson’s Island occurs as Huck is fleeing his

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    Jim Vs Jim The White Americans significantly had an advantage against the African Americans. Mark Twain wrote‚ “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” to display how a black man can be a father figure of a typical white child. The two JimsJim Finn or “Pap” and Jim the black run-away slave differ in verities of ways. Pap‚ as Huck’s biological father is portrayed as a drunk and a complete failure. Considering Pap’s negative behavior‚ Huck never really liked Pap because of his violent acts and Pap was ignorant

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