Answered You can hire a professional tutor to get the answer.
Hi, need to submit a 500 words essay on the topic Huck Finn, Theme/Chapter Analysis.As a result, he is willing to fight for his friend.The first chapter begins Twain’s investigation of race and soci
Hi, need to submit a 500 words essay on the topic Huck Finn, Theme/Chapter Analysis.
As a result, he is willing to fight for his friend.
The first chapter begins Twain’s investigation of race and society, two of the major thematic concerns in .Huckleberry Finn. It is indicated since the beginning of the novel that in the town of St. Petersburg, owning slaves is considered normal and unremarkable—even the Widow Douglas, a
pious Christian, owns slaves. The slaves depicted in the novel are “household slaves,” slaves who worked on small farms and in homes in which the master owned only a few slaves. Twain tacitly contrasts this type of slavery with the more brutal form of plantation slavery, in which hundreds of slaves worked for a single master, creating greater namelessness between slave and master, which in turn led to more backbreaking labor—and, often, extreme brutality. Some critics have accused Twain of painting too soft a picture of slavery by not writing about plantation slaves. However, by depicting the “better” version of slavery, Twain is able to make a sharper criticism of the deceptive dehumanization that accompanies all .forms of slavery: the “lucky” household slaves, just like their counterparts on the plantations, are also in danger of having their families torn apart and are never considered fully human. There may be difference in the tasks of the slaves but in reality they are facing the same situation. Twain’s portrayal suggests that if the “better” slavery is this terrible, the horrors of the “worse” type must be even more awful and dehumanizing. It is important to note here that Twain uses the word .nigger, .which has gotten .Huckleberry Finn .in trouble with many twentieth-century school boards, with a nonchalance that is certainly troubling to us today.
Twain’s portrayal of slaveholding in this first chapter also raises questions about the hypocrisy and moral emptiness of society. Throughout the novel, Huck encounters seemingly respectable people who happen to own slaves—an