For human beings, community consciousness belonging to others, families, or associates is necessary. Many people can achieve their desire to accept through a common system of common beliefs. Religion in American literature brings a sense that it belongs to characters, but religion also juxtaposes mankind and free will without judgment. In many cases, the pressure to become an outstanding person in morals can lead to some incomplete collapse. As the famous writer Mark Twain believes, "human beings are the only animals with real religion - some of them" (tween).
Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was mainly held around the year 1840 along the Mississippi River and the Mississippi River. Mark Twain has placed the hero's Huckleberry Fin in many situations. Many of Huck's decisions may be directly related to Ralph Waldo Emerson's "independence" article. Emerson strongly believes in non-compliance and self-reliance, or the idea that you act as you think is right. Emerson himself is an unruly man, not a society, believes that people need to be correct according to their beliefs.
Mark Twain's "Adventure of Huckleberry Finn" is about a boy named Huckleberry Finn and his adventure in life, so it seems to be a good book for high school students. Experience, he is dealing with the struggle he encountered, or when he finds a runaway slave named Jim he is on an island to be hidden, he is sold as a slave not. Through the novel, readers will know that Hack is a father, has an adventurous personality that wishes to help the fugitive slave gym live, and to meet his family.
"Adventure of Huckleberry Finn". Mark Twain, a legendary story about Mark Twain's Huckleberry Fin, talked to a young, discreet orphan named Hack, with a narrator telling his story, accompanied by a runaway slave named Jim. They all embarked on various stories. A naughty adventure under the Mississippi River, Jim owned by Huck's caregiver Watson and the widow Douglas faces the biggest problem of the novel. Hack and Jim are faced with the whole novel.