Friendship and Betrayal in The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn. Throughout the novel Huck
experiences different types of friendships from Tom Sawyer, who is just about
the complete opposite a person can be from Huck too Jim who is in a similar
situation and yet in a completely different world. One of the best examples of Huck’s friendship
is his experience with Jim when they came across a dead body and Jim covered it
with a sheet and would not let him see it which was to shielded Huck from as
much as he could, to try to protect his innocence. Huck also has experienced betrayal throughout
his entire life even before when the novel begins. His father, Pap has abused Huck throughout
his life (which he can no longer do) that has affected the way Huck has grown up
and thinks. An example of this is how
whenever Huck meets strangers he never tells any factual information about
himself and goes under as a false identity and backstory. This is the opposite of Tom who is strictly
book smart as appose to Huck who is street smart. Because Tom is book smart he would not be
able to survive what Huck endures, Tom would not be able to instantaneously
think of a name and back-story and have it flow so smoothly as though it were
real like Huck can. This is due to
practice from previous actions that is the result of being a son of a... town
drunk.
3 comments:
Fantastic!
Justin, don't forget to add your name to the title of your blog. :)
Hey Justin! I liked the examples you used to portray friendship and betrayal within the novel. Jim seems to develop into a father figure which shows how he grows to trust Huck and bring their friendship closer. Also the bio of pap shows how he is responsible for his surviving tactics and such. You can make a connection to Pap's abuse, to Huck's situation. Evidently it seems that Pap betrayed Huck by not providing him a good childhood and set good examples of his own. So ya, cool examples and stuff I like the connections you made through the two separate characters and it's ironic that a runaway slave is more of a father figure than his father. Weird..
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