Friday, April 3, 2020
Adventures Of Huck Finn And Racism Essays - English-language Films
  Adventures Of Huck Finn And Racism    There is a current debate that the description of Jim in the novel  "Huckleberry Finn" is racist leading to some schools banning it from  their libraries. Jim's character is described as an uneducated and simple  sounding; illiterate slave and some people have looked upon this  characterization as racist. Jim is depicted as a slave in the south during a  period when slavery was common place and widely accepted as the way of life.    Slaves of this time period were not provided any formal education; never allowed  any independent thought and were constantly mistreated and abused. The author in  my opinion is merely describing how a slave spoke in those days and was trying  to give you the true feeling behind his thought, while writing this tale.    Despite a few instances in which Jim's description might be misconstrued as  being racist, such as the use of the word "nigger", the reader should  be able to understand that this is a fictional portrayal of two boys, one white  and one black, during a time when slavery was common place. There is an obvious  contrast of the mind set depicted in Twain's novel compared to then and now.    The use of the word "nigger" is most certainly a very slanderous slang  term that is not socially acceptable in present times. The dialect in which Jim  is speaking indicates how Jim spoke do to his lack of education and refinement  that white people refused to provide to slaves. This provision was not permitted  as white slave owners viewed blacks as property and as being unable to learn  proper grammar and structure of the English language. Some historians have  stated that this was also so because it allowed the white's to maintain  control over their slaves in order to "keep the upper hand", so to  speak. We as a modern society should maintain an open mind when dealing with  literary works such as Huckleberry Finn and bare in mind that novels such as  these are written during socially diverse and sometimes opposite ways of  thinking. We should not ban a literary work such as Huckleberry Finn simply  because it is not accepted by modern day standards. As we look further into the  character's( Jim's) dialogue we find that Twain has written as accurately as  possible the way that he would sound and also to make you stop and think and  picture in your mind him speaking that way. Though difficult to interpret at  times, it gives you an authentic feel of this character's persona. For those  that are die-hard readers, that "lose themselves" in what they are  reading, this approach is ideal.    
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