In July 1876, a man named Samuel Clemens started writing one of the most important and influential works in the history of American literature. Under Mark Twain's pen name, this work began as a sequel to Twain's popular adventure novel "Adventures of Tom Sawyer." As he writes the sequel, the writer is known for his humor, sarcasm, and American social criticism, and he began to shift from the adventurous style of the boy to a more serious, critical social style It was.
Huck Finn racism is a racist book by Huck Finn. Since its publication more than 100 years ago, Huck Finn, one of Mark Twain's most popular novels, has raised controversy. Still, many educators support dismissal from school libraries. For Americans after civilians, this argument comes from the fact that Twain uses misspellings, grammatical differences, curse words. - Hack's mature journey Mark Twain's novel "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" is based on the foundation of a boy who grew up in Missouri in the mid-nineteenth century. The adventure Huckfin encountered while drifting the Mississippi River drew many serious problems on the coast of civilization more known as society.
Mark Twain can briefly explain Hacken's racial discrimination. Not because he likes racial discrimination, because Twain grew and thought that racial discrimination and slavery were not bad things. The book Huck Finn was written after the Civil War, so things are still getting cold in the war. Listening to the word "niger" and other ethnic words was not uncommon, as slavery and racial discrimination fought with the possession of all slaves. Twain wrote a book from the eyes of an innocent boy, Huck, and Twain is a bad thing to use Hack to convey slavery messages, we need to change. Hack grew up, once was a slave system and racism like Twain, but he did not know that they were bad because of the way he raised him.