How Does Huck Finn Mature

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Pages: 5

The novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain ,in many ways, is a novel about Huck's passage into manhood through life lessons that Huck experiences throughout the novel. Huckleberry Finn is an uneducated, arrogant boy who faces the ideas in which society taught people to believe. Society has challenged Huck through his beliefs in Humanism towards Blacks, where he stands in the world, and trusting his own view of right from wrong. The trip that Huck goes on with the runaway slave, Jim, teaches Huck about emotion, responsibility, and morality. Huck Finn has a constantly developing relashionship with Jim, as they make progress on the raft. Jim represents all slaves in the novel because he is a former slave that was treated as any black would be treated by a slave owner. The lesson that Huck learns, as his relationship …show more content…
Huck trusts in his own views of right and wrong when he sees that white people are equal to Blacks while society wants Huck to think that black people are not human beings. When Huck learns to trust his own views of right and wrong, he shows maturity because Huck is learning to establish his own opinion. An example of when Huck proves he trusts in his own views of right and wrong is when Huck says, "All right, then, I'll go to hell-and tore it up" (195). Huck realizes that he is completely going against society for a person that society considers worthless as a human being. Huck is going with what his gut feeling is telling him and this is showing he has improved the trust he puts into his views of right and wrong. Huck choosing to be against society and going with what he believes is a turning point in his life because he is putting himself in a position of him not being able to go back to being civilized. Huck is proving that he is willing to risk his whole life for Jim, Huck is going on a true gut feeling instead of an opinion that has come from somewhere