The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
How is Mark Twain not a racist? Use 3 examples from the text to support
Just give me some "inspiration" to help me out here.
Asked by
raspberry45
Last updated by
Aslan
Just give me some "inspiration" to help me out here.
I think like most classic literature we really need to understand it within the context of the time period. Twain set this novel before the Civil War; roughly 1835–1845. Slavery in the Southern United States was a reality and the characters' words and actions had to reflect this. Really, if anything, Huckleberry Finn is a book despoiling many of the ideas about racism at the time. As Huck grows and matures, he begins to see Jim (the escaped slave) as a human being and a friend. Jim becomes a character more worthy of friendship than even Tom. The vernacular is offensive only if we take it in todays context, this however would be a misreading of the book.