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Published byRoy Ford Modified over 8 years ago
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It was published in 1884 Huckleberry Finn is set in the Mississippi River Valley, around 1840.
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A coming-of-age story or novel is when the character undergoes adventures and/or turmoil in his/her growth & development as a human being. Some characters deal with the reality of cruelty in the world-- war, violence, death, racism, and hatred--while others deal with family, friends, or community issues. “Coming-of-Age”
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In short, it is a story about a young boy, an escaped slave, and the friendship and adventure they share sailing down the Mississippi River
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This was written during the period of slavery. Throughout the novel, Twain comments about his disgust towards slavery.
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The Adventures of Huck Finn is banned in some libraries and schools, and is currently on the “Banned Book List.”
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The Adventures of Huck Finn is banned for is depiction of blacks, its use of the “N- Word,” its thoughts against slavery, and its use of dialect.
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A new effort to sanitize “Huckleberry Finn” comes from Alan Gribben, a professor of English at Auburn University, at Montgomery, Ala., who has produced a new edition of Twain’s novel that replaces the word “n-word” with “slave.” (2011)“slave.” The N-word, which appears in the book more than 200 times, was a common racial description in the South, used by Twain as part of his characters’ vernacular speech and as a reflection of mid-19th-century social attitudes along the Mississippi River.
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Twain’s Literary Style: Realism and Regionalism Dialect: –Dialects are spoken by definable groups of people from a particular geographic region, economic group, or social class.
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Local Color/Regionalism The portrayal of behaviors distinctive to a region, such as speech, behavior, dress, food, beliefs, etc.
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