Huck Finn 4

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Naivety of Huckleberry Finn The dialect that Mark Twain used in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" mocks the poor education and incompetence of the South in the late 1800's. As the narrator of the novel, Huck Finn, fits the exemplary part of a young and naive boy. He does not comprehend the immensity of the world but, rather the small portion that he sees. As Huck takes the reader through each episode of the book, …

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showed last 75 words of 581 total
…to happen to Jim because he takes superstition so seriously. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a picaresque novel, written in first person narration form and has a hero of an odious level of society. It is a very realistic view and displays pragmatic situations and also verisimilitude. The novel is written episodically and gives off a taste of the naive narrator of Huck Finn, leaving us to remember him in a more applicable sense.