Racist Attitudes In Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn

Words: 447
Pages: 2

One of the American literatures top selling novels, Huckleberry Finn describes racial attitudes in South in late 1880s. Blacks were treated as things with no emotion not people. In the adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain demonstrates post-civil war racial strain between whites and blacks by… racial attitudes and controversies, the “sivilized” world, and Hucks attitude begins to shift. In Huckleberry Finn, racist attitudes are spread throughout the novel, controversial and obvious uses of the world “nigger” throughout the book. Twains frequent use of the word “nigger” when referring to black slaves, like Jim. Today that is racial slur but in the novel it’s for African Americans. Jim is Miss Watson’s property but the escapes …show more content…
Hucks problems with sivilized society are based on some mature observations about the worth of society, like Toms band of robbers. (FIX). At the end Huck and Jim achieve a certain freedom. Not just freedom from “civilization” or slavery nut from the bad racist mindset of the South. Huck looks at Jim as a friend not property. As a result, difference actions begin to arise. Hucks attitude toward his black companion begins to shift. Huck makes a pledge to himself not to “do him no more mean tricks; and I wouldn’t done that or if id knowed it would more him feel that way.” (Twain 107). Huck has a hard time getting over how society forces hum to think “lick his boot” (FIX). Jim accepts his inferior to whites and he says he feels accountable strict racial rules in the community. The way that these decisions are made show that Huck does have a good set of morals. Despite racial attitudes in the late 1800s, Huck overcame obstacles by racial attitudes, controversies in the Huckleberry Finn novel led to Hucks attitude changing towards Jim. Twain tried to convey ideas and equality through Hucks actions and thoughts. He considers Jim his equal and a friend. Huck learns to question his values based on events that occur as a result of his friendship with Jim. That Jim is an