1 / 59

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ,

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ,. By Mark Twain. Status Quo and Conformity: Civilizing Huck Chapters 1-5. Chapter 1: Thematic Connection. Huck and religion “…I don’t take no stock in dead people”

tasha
Download Presentation

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ,

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, By Mark Twain

  2. Status Quo and Conformity: Civilizing HuckChapters 1-5

  3. Chapter 1: Thematic Connection • Huck and religion • “…I don’t take no stock in dead people” • “…she was going to live as to go to the good place. Well, I couldn’t see no advantage in going where she was going, so I made my mind up that I wouldn’t try for it.” – does not understand heaven/hell • Spider and Huck’s superstitious mind – only behaves this way when it happens to him

  4. Chapter 2: Thematic Connection • Jim defends Miss Watson’s home • Tom tricks Jim • Huck does not want to, not because it was mean, but because he would get caught (not mature) • Tom Sawyer Gang formed • Understate death and the value of human life • Hypocritical • “…all the boys said it would be wicked to do it on a Sunday…”

  5. Chapter 3: Thematic Connection • Huck does not understand “spiritual gifts” (assumes physical gifts after praying to God) • Tom Sawyer “lies” about the A-rabs and gold and elephants (extravagance) • Is superstition a lie? Is it harmful? (see last 3 sentences of the chapter) • White lie? • Pretend?

  6. Chapter 4: Thematic Connection • “I don’t take no stock in mathematics, anyway.”- doesn’t trust “status quo” • Superstitious: • Drops salt shaker • Identifies his father by cross in boot heel- he learns superstition from his father • Twain commentary on superstition vs religion • Sold all his property to judge Thatcher for $1 so he would not have to tell lies • What lies? • Jim’s fortune tells Huck a truth • Angel and devils exist and choices cause pleasure or pain: Jim cares for Huck- juxtaposed to Pap! Showing up

  7. Chapter 5: Thematic Connection • Has not seen father in over a year: • “…you think that you are some sort of big-bug, don’t you?” • Pap States: • Drop school • Stop thinking that he is better than him • Stop reading • Pap took H.’s only dollar and then lied to judge and wife and was released from prison

  8. Escape and The Wealth of Self: Chapters 6-11

  9. Chapter 6: Thematic Connection • H goes to school to spite Pap (is this the correct reason?) • Pap beats H and he wants to run away • Pap rants about the gov’t and a black person’s right to vote (after drinking whiskey) • Gets to be so drunk that he hallucinates about snakes • H has to guard him

  10. Chapter 7: Thematic Connection • Escapes his home in a canoe; cleans out the place • Floats down the river, hiding • Shoots a wild pig and then kills it; more humane • Decides to head to Jackson’s Island

  11. Chapter 8: Thematic Connection • Verisimilitude of nature; camp, moon, animals, sounds • Folks think H is dead • H thinks prayer only works for the “right kind” • Finds Jim • J assumes H is a ghost • “Well…I, I…run off.” (finds out he was going to be sold to New Orleans) • H swears not to tell even though people will call him a “low down” abolitionist (anti-slavery) • J believes that he is rich because he owns himself and he is worth $800- his self-worth is tied to value as property

  12. Chapter 9: Thematic Connection • Verisimilitude- natural setting • H and J help each other out, get along well • Find dead man and J does not have him look at his face • Take goods from the floating house • He hides Jim

  13. Chapter 10: Thematic Connection • H tricks J with dead snake whose mate shows up and actually bites him • H feels foolish, but does not admit or apologize • J recovers and they decide to get supplies from town, H will dress in a disguise (a girl)

  14. Chapter 11: Thematic Connection • H becomes Sarah Williams • Finds out town gossip that J killed H and that Pap lied to the judge and got $ to “look for H”, but drank it away • Judith Loftus functions to share that there is a reward for Jim • H lies to her once she finds out he is a boy on account of his mannerisms with needle and thread- white lie okay? • Setting: St. Petersburg

  15. Bonding Over Inhumanity: Chapter 12-18

  16. Chapter 12: Thematic Connection • H. tricks “the men” by building a fire- to help Jim • Description of the raft- imagery • St. Louis 7-8 hours drift; stormy weather- symbolic of negative situation • H. “borrows” chicken, watermelon, etc. – is this okay? • “gang of murderers”- juxtapose to “Tom Sawyer Gang” plan • Raft gone!

  17. Chapter 13: Thematic Connection • Still raining, but harder- H. questions if he had become a murderer- does he learn? • H. lies about owning the boat • H. helps the “rapscallions” and notices that the widow would have been proud- does he mature? • Slept “like dead people”

  18. Chapter 14: Thematic Connection • J. fears being caught, dying or being sold; H. says he has “an uncommonly level head for a nigger”- is that a compliment? (partner discuss) • J. discusses Solomon as poor king for dismissing the value of human life due to greed • H. notes: “I never see such a nigger.”- what does he mean? What is Twain’s voice revealing here? • H. says he would not allow any “nigger” to call him “Polly-voo-francy”- has he learned anything? • A man should talk like a man! – Twain’s voice: what truth is J. uttering?

  19. Chapter 15: Thematic Connection • Fog rolls in- setting symbolic of tone and plot: “…nothing looks natural in a fog.”; feels like you laying “dead still” but you are moving downstream • Tricks Jim again: says it was all a dream • Jim finds out and feels bad: H. almost wanted to kiss his foot to get gim back; took a while to “humble himself to a nigger”, but he did it- has he learned?

  20. Chapter 16: Thematic Connection • H. regrets helping J.- “…wished [he] was dead”- what did Miss Watson do to him to make him treat her this way- Does H. value human life? (partner discuss)- Has he learned? • H. discussed feeling morally incorrect allowing J. to plot to buy his wife and 2 children from “…a man [Huck] didn’t even know.”- does he value human life? Has he learned? • Does not give up J: reason? Self-preservation; “it’s troublesome to do right and troublesome to do wrong”; if he needed to make a decision, he would do what was “handiest”- has he learned? (Twain’s voice) • Raft destroyed: symbol of old ways dying? Shift in text

  21. Chapter 17: Thematic Connection • Meets the Grangerfords- Huck’s foil- “Buck”- dresses in his clothes (mirror) • Verisimilitude in the detailed descriptionof house, table, pictures, etc… • Emmeline G. “writes poetry for dead people”- died young –H. wants to write about her- does he learn/care for someone else? • H. loves all family, even the dead ones • H. notes: “The old lady took care of the room herself, though there were plenty niggers…”- does he care/learn?

  22. Chapter 18: Thematic Connection • Col Grangerford was a Gentleman- what makes him one? • Whole family I beautiful, sweet, hndsome: tone? • Owned over 100 slaves • “clans of aristocracies”: also Shepherdsons • Buck is civilized Huck- BUT guns and feud? How civilized is that? • Went to church- all liked the sermon, but, about “brotherly love”- hypocritical (Twain’s voice) • Sees gun fight and Buck dies: made him sick to his stomach- life is valuable

  23. Lessons in Assistance and Betrayal: Chapter 19-31

  24. Chapter 19: Thematic Connection • They meet the king and duke • Exaggerated and uneducated • H. says he realized this but was okay with the lie • “The best way to get along with his kind of people is to let them have their own way.” • What kind of “people” is Pap? • What has Huck learned? Is this good?

  25. Chapter 20: Thematic Connection • Duke, Dauphin H and Jim head into town- hea d to “camp-meeting” where tearful and emotional mourners crying and wailing but: “You couldn’t make out what the preacher said…” • King of France lies and gets money from the crowd • Created a fake poster to hide Jim

  26. Chapter 21: Thematic Connection • Duke and King deceitful- taking money from poor town folks for a fake performance • Boggs drunk and belligerent and H. witnesses him shot by the Sheriff while begging for his life • Whole town was angry and started a mob to lynch Sherbern- do you agree?

  27. Chapter 22: Thematic Connection • Sherburnstates: “The idea of you lynching anybody! The idea of you thinking you had pluck enough to lynch a man!”- what’s the diff. between “anybody” and a man? What is Twain’s commentary here? (partner share) • H. learns about the “mob” mentality • “bully circus” and commentary on tricked ring-master- BUT H. says that it could have all of his $ any time. Has he learned?

  28. Chapter 23: Thematic Connection • King and Duke noted as “rapscallions” • “The Royal Nonesuch” was a lie to get $ • Duke and king deceitful again • Does not tell J.- “..you couldn’t tell them from the real kind.” (Twain’s commentary on royalty)

  29. Chapter 24: Thematic Connection • Peter Wilks and the story of money and betrayal • Duke and King lie that he is their brother • “Well, if ever I struck anything like it, I’m a nigger. It was enough to make a body ashamed of the human race.

  30. Chapter 25: Thematic Connection • Duke and King “…bust out a crying so you could a heard them to Orleans, most…” • H. states: “I never see anything so disgusting.” – what does he learn? • Mary Jane produces a letter from her father (the will) • Doctor warns the daughters but they do not listen (Twain’s voice?)

  31. Chapter 26: Thematic Connection • Discussion with “hare-lip”- why is she not referred to by name? What does H lie about and almost get caught 3 times? • H. states: “…this is a girl that I’m letting that old reptle rob her of her money!” • Resolves to steal the $ for the girls • Has he learned? • H. steals the $ from the straw bed and hides it

  32. Chapter 27: Thematic Connection • Peter’s Funeral Mass and the girl’s betrayal • H. places $ in the coffin • Discuss what the King and Duke do after the funeral • H. heart ached seeing that the girls were getting tricked- did he do anything about it? • Chapter ends with H. blaming the slaves- why? How does he feel about it?

  33. Chapter 28: Thematic Connection • H. discusses validity of telling the truth • Tells Mary Jane everything • Explains that he had not thought of Mary Jane since that time, but he thought he might pray for her • How does H fix the situation?

  34. Chapter 29: Thematic Connection • Doctor sees King and dike in canoe in the morning • Doctor tells H. that he is not a good liar (reminiscent Judith Loftus) • Checking the body for tatoos to prove king and duke are not frauds • Verisimilitude of nature- storm as symbol; H. escapes when they find gold • H. likes Mary Jane: “She was the best girl [he] ever did see”. • King and duke escape, too

  35. Chapter 30: Thematic Connection • H. watches as king and duke argue about who put the $ in the coffin • Of course, he told J. everything later- he feels compelled to tell him. Why? (partner discuss)

  36. Chapter 31: Thematic Connection • “First they did a lecture on temperance, but they didn’t make enough to get drunk on.” (ironic; Twain’s voice) • K. and D. sell Jim for $40 to Silas Phelps; H. cries and cannot believe they tricked J. like that • CLIMAX: H. deliberates about J. and his value as a person, but that is juxtaposed to H.’s self-preservation • H. states: “all right, then, I’ll go to hell”- and tore [the letter] up. (self-preservation or matured into caring for J.?) • Left K and D to go and steal J. out of slavery

More Related