Title: Freedom in Huckleberry Finn Category:Literature / English Details: Words: 736 | Pages: 3.1 (approximately 235 words/page)
Freedom in Huckleberry Finn
The conflicts surrounding the quest for freedom in Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn create a plot think with sorrows and triumphs of a boy traveling with a runaway slave in the harrowing years before the United States Civil War. The overlying theme of escape seems to be an obvious one: Huckleberry Finn wishes to flee from life with a drunken father and newfound benefactor, while Jim tires of the binds of slavery. The two journey off on a raft down the Mississippi showed first 85 words of 736 total
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showed last 85 words of 736 total novel Twain addresses issues of hate, prejudice, and a society that passes down ill-founded behaviors rather than education the new generations. Huck and Jim runaway from a world that is inhuman in its civilization, and find the many hidden wonders of a bare life on the wide Mississippi River. By setting off alone, they find each other and the joys personal independence. Huck concludes that, “It did seem so good to be free…all by ourselves on the big river and nobody to bother us, (201).