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You Don’t Know Me” In Chapter 1 of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck
spoke for Mark Twain when he made the statement, “You don’t know about me...but
that ain’t no matter.” The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was not a sequel to
his other adventure stories but a literary statement questioning how civilized
our American society really was. Twain was not a racist but a realist. The
perception of racism in the novel should be attributed to the historical setting
and the effect it had on its characters. The story took place in the South
before the Civil War. The South’s economic structure depended on keeping the
Negro in servitude. Many white Americans accepted slavery and believed the
Negroes were inferior which resulted in racist attitudes and behaviors. Twain
used the character development of Jim and Huck to demonstrate how these
attitudes could change once Huck was able to see past the cultural stereotype of
Jim being a Negro and recognize he was a person who was both noble and decent
and deserved to be free like any other man whether he was black or white.
Twain’s early development of the character Jim has been controversial because of
the apparent racism. In the early chapters, Jim was portrayed as a typical slave
stereotype: superstitious, ignorant, and naive. On two separate occasions Huck
delighted in exploiting Jim’s superstitious beliefs to play a joke on him. In
Chapter 10, Huck put a dead snake in Jim’s blanket after Jim had warned him
that, “it was the worse luck in the world to touch a snakeskin.” Then Huck
realized Jim wasn’t really the fool he thought him to be when the dead
rattlesnake’s mate returned and bit Jim. Huck felt bad.
Huck played his last
trick on Jim after they passed Cairo and got separated by the currents. At
first, Huck thought it was funny to pretend that they had never been separated,
but he was humbled by Jim’s reactions which showed both dignity and his strong
sense of value. Huck’s viewpoint of Jim was changing, but his former upbringing
was evident when he openly admitted, “It was fifteen minutes before I could work
myself up to and humble myself to a nigger.” It was statements like this that
have made many dispute Twain’s intentions. Did he have to use the word “nigger”
over two hundred times? Throughout The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain
used dialect and the word “nigger.” The use of the word was not purely racist,
since it was not used in a derogatory manner but as a term meaning black person.
The real racism was in the way the characters viewed “niggers.” After the
steamboat explosion in Chapter 32 Aunt Sally said, “Good gracious! anybody
hurt?” Then Huck casually replied, “No’m. Killed a nigger.” Relieved Aunt Sally
said, “Well it’s lucky; because sometimes people do get hurt.” Twain was being
ironic and wanted his reader to see the real truth behind the Southern
perception of humanity. Neither considered the death of a Negro worth noting. As
the novel progressed, Huck had to wrestle with the former values instilled in
him by this culture. During Huck and Jim’s adventures down the river, Huck
learned the real difference between hypocrisy and prejudice and friendship and
values.
The senseless killing between the Grangerfords and the Shepherdsons made
him question civilized ways that perpetuated a feud where basically good people
foolishly follow old customs rather than changing tradition. Huck was further
angered that a whole town could be duped by the king and duke. The town
symbolized society. Even though some of the townspeople disagreed with the king
when he inhumanly separated and sold the Wilks family’s slaves, no one
interfered. Although many could interpret this incident as racist, Twain used
this incident to show how Huck’s viewpoint and values had changed. Huck realized
that Jim and other “niggers” were not just someone else’s property but human
beings and should be treated accordingly. Twain was not a racist. Throughout the
book, he did not make one derogatory remark about the black people but instead
characterized some of the members of the civilized society which had enslaved
them to be religious zealots and hypocrites, fools and liars, robbers and
murderers, and rogues and scoundrels. Twain had satirized the pre-civil war
American society and its institutions to make his reader question their present
actions. If the reading public had taken a closer look at The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn, they would have realized it directly opposed the current Jim
Crow laws. Twain had purposefully denied that there was a moral or motive in the
story fearing they would not see his point or would turn him off like Huck and
Tom’s friends did when Tom Sawyer outlined the rules he found in adventure
books. Instead, Twain hoped his reader would view the world through Huck’s eyes
to realize if they were open and honest they too would be able to do what was
right. Then they could develop a deeper understanding or sympathy for other
human beings and be able to recognize racism.
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