The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is widely considered the most important novels in recent history and is often called the basis for all modern American literature. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn takes place in pre-Civil War Missouri, and the book is about Huckleberry Finn and his adventures. He fakes his death to get away from his abusive father, and when he was running away he found the runaway slave, Jim. He and Jim continue to go down the Mississippi river on a raft, to try to get Jim to freedom. Along the way, they encounter many people, such as two con men who ride the raft with them, and Huck gets involved in a family feud. Eventually, the con men sell Jim back into slavery, but luckily for Huck, they sell him to his …show more content…
In document B, Jim states, “doan’ do nuffin to Ole Jim, ‘at ‘uz awluz yo’ fren’ ”(Document B). This displays that Huck had always treated Jim good enough for Jim to consider them friends, and is one of the main points that make people believe Huck viewed him as a friend. Also, in document E, Huck says, “But somehow I couldn’t seem to strike no places to harden me against him, but only the other kind”(Document E). This illustrates how even when Huck tries to think bad of Jim, he can’t because they had become too good of friends along their adventure. Huck knows he is Jim’s best friend as evidenced by when Huck said, “I was the best friend old Jim ever had in the world, and the only one he’s got now”(Document E). This quote explains how Huck feels about Jim and how he realizes he’s his best, and only friend. Huck had become very close with Jim during their travels, and he feels not only as an equal with him, but is very good friends with him.
Some readers believe that Huck views Jim as a father figure. To start, Huck did not have a very good father in his life, so it would make sense if he would look up to someone like Jim as a father figure. In document E Huck is explains how well Jim has treated him, “.... and would always call me honey, and pet me, and do everything he could think of for me, and how good he always was”(Document E). This describes how Jim treated Huck like a good father would treat his child if they
There are moments when Huck appears to value his relationship with Jim by being protective of him, but does this to save himself. Earlier in the novel when beginning their odyssey, Huck forces Jim to “lay down in the canoe and cover up with the quilt, because if he set up, people could tell he was a nigger a good ways off” (48). In this instance, Huck protects Jim’s identity so that anyone passing by will not catch them. However, he is literally putting Jim below him to assert authority. The difference between how the two protect each other is that Jim does it because he truly sees them as a team.
Throughout all the documents, Huckleberry Finn and Jim have an interesting but also amazing relationship. These documents took place in 1885, and 2010 in Missouri. They tell about all they encountered together. Whether it was hiding from Huck’s drunk father, and Jim’s owner, or trying to free Jim from the cabin where he is being held captive, the possibilities are endless with them. How does Huckleberry Finn see Jim?
Jim cares dearly for Huck and treats him like a son. When they were separated Jim is more concerned with Huck’s well being than his own, showing his selflessness and maturity. Huck never having anyone truly care about him, doesn’t know how to react and decides rather than give back affection, to prank Jim: "What's the matter with you, Jim? You been a-drinking?"’(ch 15 p 83), Huck acts like the whole ordeal never even happened to lighten the mood. Eventually when Jim catches on to the prank, he is not at all amused.
Jim was with Huck since the beginning and took care of him and cared for him also teaching him lesson on the way. Jim is trying to protect huck from the outside evil of the world. When Jim finds Huck’s dad’s body in the houseboat he would let Huck see the body because he wants huck to be happy “ Come in, Huck, but doan’ look at his face-it’s too ‘gashly’” ( Twain 57). Even though Huck’s dad beat huck all the time Huck still loves his dad.
A conversation about literature shaping novels would be incomplete without mention of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The novel has bold ideas and interestingly new story telling style. The novel takes place around the young narrator, Huckleberry Finn, and the runaway slave on their journey to freedom. The setting is 1830s Southern United States, along the Mississippi river. Huck runs away from his alcoholic father who had kidnapped him for his money, and allows his hometown to believe he is dead.
He wasn’t used to having a father figure in his life because his actual father was an alcoholic and was abusive. “Would always call me honey, and pet me, and do everything he could think of for me, and how good he always was,” (Document E). This shows that not only did Huck care about Jim, but Jim also cared about Huck’s well being, too. Having a father figure was very important to Huck because his actual father wasn’t really a father figure to him at all. Since someone actually cared about him and treated him with respect and care, it meant the world to him.
“All right, then, I’ll go to hell… And for a starter I would go steal Jim out of slavery again”(215). Though Huck feels he’s doing something right, back then people would have saw this as a crime. Thus, demonstrating his relationship and bond that he creates with Jim throughout their adventures and journeys. Not to mention his attempt to save Jim, characterizes Huck as a hero.
Creative Title Mark Twain is known for his controversial writing, most well-known is his novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The novel focuses on Huckleberry Finn, a young, uneducated boy about 13 years of age. Huck has misadventures with some unlikely allies such as; Jim, the previous slave of Huck’s guardian Miss Watson, the Duke and the Dauphin, sneaky thieves who attempt to rob the Wilks sisters, and the most important, Tom Sawyer, Huck’s role model. Huck looks up to Tom the entire novel and is continuously thinking of what Tom would do in the situation. Huck Finn’s character, the use of the river, and the language in the novel are aspects that make the use of the novel necessary in the curriculum.
In chapter sixteen Jim says in regards to Huck “Dah you goes, de ole true Huck; De on’y white genalman dat’ ever kep’ his promise to ole Jim.” - Jim The true meaning behind this quote is kind of upsetting, because it shows just how badly blacks were treated in this time period. Jim feels Huck is the only white man who has ever kept a promise to him. This promise was to never turn Jim in.
Huck lives in a time and place where African-Americans are legally not human, so that influences Huck's brain, causing him to see Jim as a slave. For example, when Jim and Huck become separated in the fog, Huck plays a rude trick. He says to Jim that they were never lost and there was no fog. Jim gives a whole speech to Huck, explaining how Huck made him feel like trash. Huck believing that Jim wasn't smart enough to figure the lie out, as well as lying to him at all, shows that Huck feels as though he is above Jim intellectually.
Huck has always seen Jim as a slave until they crossed paths while going down the river. The two develop a friendship and Huck starts to care about Jim and his well being. Although Huck views Jim as someone he cares about, he still sees him as a slave as well. “ I would do the right thing and the clean thing, and go and write that nigger’s owner and tell where he was,” ( Document E). Huck is in a continuous battle with his inner self when it comes to his views on Jim.
Huck and Tom have been friends for a while as hinted at in the beginning by Mark Twain with the preceding novel, the Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Tom idolizes the life of a robber and convinces his friends to play along in his games of stealing and murdering. As the novel plays on Tom reappears towards the end as the nephew of the Phelps family. Here we learn that Tom is still the same and doesn’t really care about the well-being of Jim nor Huck with his stupid
The Light of Friendship born on the Mississippi River Throughout The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the relationship between Huck and Jim are the main topic of the whole book. They all had their own personality and characteristics. The relationship between Huck and Jim changes as the story goes on. In the very beginning, it was clear that Huck considers Jim as a slave, on the other hand, Huck did not regard Jim as a normal human like himself.
Naturally, as his bond with Jim cultivates, Huck unknowingly treats him as a human. Through Huck’s sensibility, he states, “It didn’t take me long to make up my mind that these liars warn’t no kings nor dukes at all … I hadn’t no objections, ‘long as it would keep peace in the family; and it warn’t no use to tell Jim, so I didn’t tell him” (Twain 125). Correspondingly, Huck gains a consideration for Jim and his personal feelings, which he expresses nonchalantly through motley aspects of their journey.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was wrote by Mark Twain in February, 1885, 20 years after the Civil War. However, the setting of the book takes place before the civil war in various locations as Huckleberry Finn, a boy about 10 years old, tries to race up the Mississippi river to escort Jim, a runaway slave, to freedom. Over the course of Huck and Jim’s adventures, they both become reliant on each other, as Huck develops what he feels is a moral obligation to see Jim to freedom, and Jim comes to respect and nearly worship Jim because of his efforts to free Jim. Throughout the book, the cultural attitudes and imposition of cultural norms at the time are very evident, and when reading it is plain to see that The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn’s