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Huck's dialect

why do you think Twain tells the story in Huck's dialect? how do you think the story would sound if told it more formal language?
Posted by tin l #93491 at May 13, 2009 10:17 PM || Report this post || Reply

Twain's message was NOT politically correct for the times. Having a 14-year-old boy tell his story removes Twain from the actual message. It also helps readers to see the discrimination from a more personal viewpoint. Huck is not educated, but he experiences the world and gets "real world" schooling. This in contrast to Tom Sawyer, who goes to school and does all the "right" things, and has some ridiculous ideas (especially about how to "free" Jim). Twain's use of the vernacular brings Huck to life in a realistic way.
Posted by coco s #17435 at May 14, 2009 11:04 AM || Report this post || Reply

Having Huck talk in "unedicated" dialect makes him seem harmless, when in fact Twain's message is a stinging one. He hides behind Huck because anyone in that time who spoke against slavery was (to borrow from Harper Lee's Atticus Finch) hounded from our midst as unfit to live with.
Posted by charles s #54728 at Sep 17, 2009 11:49 AM || Report this post || Reply

 

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