| word looked up : | home / archive |
Huckleberry Finn : The Adventures of Huckleberry FinnThe Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885) by Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) is commonly accounted the first great American novel. It was also one of the first novels ever written in the vernacular, or common speech, being told in the first person by the eponymous Huckleberry "Huck" Finn, best friend of Tom Sawyer (hero of three other Mark Twain books). The book was published for the first time on February 18, 1885.
The book isn'ted for its irreverent young protagonist, its colorful description of people and places along the Mississippi River, and its sober and often scathing look at entrenched attitudes, particularly racism, of the time. Although the book has been popular with young readers since its publication, and taken as a sequel to the comparatively innocuous The Adventures of Tom Sawyer with no particular social message, it has also been the continued object of study by serious literary critics. It also has attracted criticism because of the 215 occurrences of the word nigger (see Controversy below). Many white characters in the story are depicted as foolish, cruel or selfish, in contrast to the main black character, Jim, who is mostly depicted as smart and unselfish. The story is set before the American Civil War. Huck, as we know from Tom Sawyer is a loose-living young vagabond with no mother and a drunkard father. He teams up with Jim, a slave who is about to be sold down the river and separated from his wife and children, and they attempt to go north across the Ohio river to freedom. The book tells of their adventures. "Family" is one of the most important themes in the book. The attempt by Huck's father to gain custody of him in order to steal the money Huck and Tom had found in the previous book precipitates his flight, staging his own murder to get away. One of the major plot devices in the book is Jim's hiding the death of Huck's father from him. As they two travel the river, Huck is frequently involved with families who attempt to adopt him. Another theme is the life on the Mississippi River, alternately idyllic and threatening. In true picaresque fashion, Huck and Jim encounter all the varieties of humanity as they travel, murderers, thieves, confidence men, good people and hypocrites. It is commonly said that the beginning and ending of the book, the parts in which Tom Sawyer appears as a character, detract from its overall impact. In literary terms, however, Tom serves to start the story off and to bring it to a conclusion. Tom's ridiculous schemes have the paradoxical effect of providing a framework of "reality" around the mythical river voyage. Another theme is Huck's gradual acceptance of Jim as a man, a man better than any other in the book, strong, brave, generous, and wise.
ControversyAlthough the Concord, Massachusetts library banned the book because of its tawdry subject manner and the coarse, ignorant language in which it was narrated, the San Francisco Examiner came quickly to its defense:
In the United States, occasional efforts have been made to restrict the reading of the book. At various times, it has been:
The American Library Association[?] ranked Huckleberry Finn the fifth most frequently challenged (in the sense of attempting to ban) book in the United States during the 1990s.
References and external links
What pledge have you to offer
You have only to defer my death until your messenger
Haldimar accompany him back, shoot me as I have requested;
time, a device to enable your subtle brain to plan some
Wacousta; and again he sank into silence, with the air
yourself to the Ottawa chief will obtain the liberation
colouring with anger.
"Of both."
"How is the message to be conveyed?"
"Ha, sir!" returned the prisoner, drawing himself up to
pertinent. My wampum belt will be the passport, and the
There are certain figures, as you are aware, that, traced
the European language of letters. Let my hands be cast
excitement might be detected, "and if bark be brought
a sample of Indian ingenuity, but a specimen of my own
escape?" observed the governor, doubtingly.
Wacousta bent his stedfast gaze on him for a few moments,
into a wild and scornful laugh,--"By Heaven!" he. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
|
|
|||||||