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Huckleberry Finn, pt II

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Is this Mark Twain's view, our (probable) view, or just Huck's? ... Mark Twain, 1885: 'We have ground the manhood out of them. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Huckleberry Finn, pt II


1
Huckleberry Finn, pt II
  • 5 April 2005
  • EN3231, Week 12

2
Todays agenda
  • Review elements of novel (mainly middle)
  • Discuss questions from end of last class
  • Significance of MT RPW poem and Twains
    cosmology
  • break
  • Reception of the novel (then and now)

3
Huckleberry Finn major segments
  • Huck at home, Huck with Pap
  • H runs away with Jim resourcefulness
  • Thieves, feuds, huckstersSociety
  • Feuding aristocrats
  • Murder of Boggs amid carnival
  • King and duke theatrics (stage and religion)
  • Peter Wilks funeral
  • Return to Phelps Farm
  • Return of Tom Sawyer problem of Jim

4
Group work
  • Please be ready to discuss these questions
  • 1. There is a great deal of role-playing and
    identity shifting in Huckleberry Finn, and in
    Chapter 17 Huck, calling himself George
    Jackson, pretends to be someone he is not. In
    this chapter he also criticizes various kinds of
    literature and quotes one poem at length. Write
    an essay in which you explain how Twain uses the
    narrative situation to satirize 19th-Century
    sentimentality.
  • 2. Chapter 18 begins with a this sentence Col.
    Grangerford was a gentleman, you see. Is this
    Mark Twains view, our (probable) view, or just
    Hucks? Write an essay in which you explain what
    Twain is doing when he has Huckleberry Finn
    describe Col. Grangerford and narrate the feud
    with the Shepherdsons
  • 3. In Chapter 31 Huck says, on one page, that
    You cant pray a lie, but on the next page he
    says All right then, Ill go to hell. Is there
    a contradiction between these two expressed
    beliefs? With reference to Hucks particular
    crisis in Chapter 31, write an essay in which you
    explain Twains representations of religious
    belief in Huckleberry Finn.
  • 4. In Chapter 32 an engine explodes, causing
    Aunt Sally to ask Anybody hurt? Huck answers
    No Mm. Killed a nigger. Consider this exchange
    in context and write an essay in which you
    explain what it reveals about the two characters.

5
Twain and Humor Distance
  • Robert Penn Warren poem

6
Huckleberry Finn reception
  • Censorship and reviews
  • Concord Library, 1885
  • 5th most contested book in US
  • Mixed reviews, many positive

7
The Athenaeum, 27/12/1884
  • With Jim he goes south down the river, and is
    the hero of such scrapes and experiences as make
    your mouth water (if you have ever been a boy) to
    read of them.
  • Approves, reads in key of adventure
  • Mark Twain at his best

8
Hartford Courant, 1885
  • They do not have the air of being invented, but
    of being found. And the dialects of the people,
    white and black--what a study are they and yet
    nobody talks for the sake of exhibiting a
    dialect. It is not necessary to believe the
    surprising adventures that Huck engages in, but
    no one will have a moment's doubt of the reality
    of the country and the people he meets.
  • Dialect as marker of realism distinction between
    romance and realism within same book.

9
Atlanta Constitution, 1885
  • Now, nothing could be more misleading than such
    a criticism as this. It is difficult to believe
    that the critics who have condemned the book as
    coarse, vulgar and inartistic can have read it.
  • Defends book against criticism censorship
    evidence of controversy

10
Boston Evening Traveler, 1885
  • It is little wonder that Mr. Samuel Clemens,
    otherwise Mark Twain, resorted to real or mock
    lawsuits, as may be, to restrain some real or
    imaginary selling of "The Adventures of
    Huckleberry Finn" as a means of advertising that
    extraordinarily senseless publication.
  • CF Twains defensive tone in front pieces
  • Hostile review refers to Concord decision.

11
Contemporary Controversy
  • The N word Jane Smiley in Harpers Magazine
    (January 1996)
  • "to invest The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    with 'greatness' is to underwrite a very
    simplistic and evasive theory of what racism is."
  • Representations of Jim
  • Elevation of the book to THE classic American
    novel
  • Famous Hemingway comment from Green Hills of
    Africa, 1935
  • Colloquial speech, adventure, realism

12
Representations of Jim
  • Various illustrations
  • Authorial intention vs. reception and
    interpretation
  • The meaning of Twains book is not solely
    determined by Twains words
  • STILLhow do we understand Twains representation
    of Jim?

13
Narrative and Representation
  • Huck tells the story Twain creates Huck the
    representation is contextualized
  • Ellison criticized the critics of the novel "one
    also has to look at the teller of the tale, and
    realize that you are getting a black man, an
    adult, seen through the condescending eyes --
    partially -- of a young white boy.
  • Hucks naivete is not Twains

14
Socratic Irony
  • H.F. is a classic naïve hero.
  • The philosopher Socrates usually dissembles by
    assuming a pose of ignorance, an eagerness to be
    instructed, and a modest readiness to entertain
    opinions proposed by others although these, upon
    his continued questioning, always turn out to be
    ill-grounded or to lead to absurd consequences
    (Abrams, 136).

15
Does Twain intend all consequences?
  • The N word normalizes racism?
  • The case, Monteiro vs. Tempe Union High School
    District, 97-15511, was closed October 19, 1998,
    when the judges handed down their opinion. That
    ended a long battle to have Huckleberry Finn and
    "A Rose for Emily," a short story by William
    Faulkner, removed from the reading list at
    McClintock High School in Tempe, Arizona.
  • African American responses satire or evasion?
    Growing body of criticism.
  • The Phelps Farm chapters in relation to
    white/liberal complacency Arac and Smiley

16
How to distinguish Mark, Huck, and Tom from each
other
  • Tom Sawyer, who has a fortune of 6,000 or more,
    pays Jim 40 in recompense for his humiliation
  • Mark Twain, 1885 We have ground the manhood out
    of them. The shame is ours, not theirs, and we
    should pay for it.
  • Individual vs collective responsibility forty
    acres and a mule
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