Finding a Friend Behind the MaskJoin now to read essay Finding a Friend Behind the MaskThroughout the novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain, the word âniggerâ is used regularly and loosely. In current society the word is one of the most derogatory, evil and hated words known. The word is hardly used now a day but back during the time that this novel was written, racism was as evident as leaves on trees. The word has caused many people to fear the issues surfaced in the novel, and therefore it is not surprising that the novel has been banned in numerous cities and states across North America. The use of the word in the novel however should not be looked at as a sin, but rather a word that places a value on how far society has come in regards to opening peopleâs eyes to the fact that there is only one way to spell human. H-u-m-a-n. Not b-l-a-c-k or w-h-i-t-e. Just h-u-m-a-n. A reoccurring theme in this novel is slavery and all of the dedicated believers that come with it; all of them with blood plagued by cruelty, and eyes blind to humanity. Mark Twain does a great deal throughout the novel to prepare the reader to create his or her own opinions and realities about slavery. Subtle but obvious enough to notice, Mark Twain is able to convince the reader that his views are proper and because of that he is very successful at proving that âniggersâ are humans too. By making Jim a main character in the novel, Mark Twain expresses his personal views on slavery through the encounters of Jim. Mark Twain creates fictitious realities about the equality of all men in several different ways, all expressed through Jim. One of the ways, is how he includes passages dedicated solely to Jimâs âhumanâ emotions. Another way results from how he shows Jim as a caring and loyal friend to Huck. The final way that Mark Twain shows Jim, a âniggerâ, as human is when he describes Huckâs feelings and reactions towards Jim. By doing all of these things, certain images are painted in the readerâs head that allow them to look through the eyes of Mark Twain. Through the eyes of a man who went against everything he was taught to believe, and a man who revealed the truth, to essentially the world, about slavery. He has proven through this novel that everyone deserves an equal chance and everyone deserves to be treated like the human they are.
Back in the times when slavery was as present as a horse at the racetrack, âniggersâ were so un-human that they didnât deserve to have feelings or emotions. They were placed solely on the earth to work as slaves and to satisfy their owners. Or at least that is what the world was forced to believe. Mark Twain had anything but a conventional mind however, and was willing to challenge the beliefs of not only the people of America but the church as well. He chose to write about the journey of a black man and a white boy, connected through the river. He created the notion that Jim was just as human as everyone else, and to help him portray the, at the time impossible, characteristic he allowed Jim to have feelings and emotions. One specific example is when Jim
niggers wrote:
I was sent to the same plantation that he was sent and I knew he loved me that much, but I didnât take him any more for my own safety on my way. My own fate was to do well with him and I was to die alone and that would be the final fate. I took the matter to the black manâs hands. The slave boys were given over to the white boyâs hands and the black boy would soon be born as a piece of black metal. As soon as it happened that he became a symbol, he must die in a long, difficult place. To believe that is not something I felt or believed.
From this perspective, Jimâs was the perfect and inspiring person to create this world in his own right. The slave boy would grow and become a huge, positive force that encouraged people to keep striving and grow as you do!
On the same note this is where the concept of the “slave spirit” comes in. Even though not quite like the real-life slave spirit, we could still identify him with the concept that Jim is human when he shows you the “slave spirit” on the back of his hat and hat. This is not an exclusive designationâonly the actual black man who is depicted in some movies and advertisements as being the most human in his humanity.
To understand the man in action, take a look at the following picture. When Jimâs wears it off, in a photo taken in the United States under the alias “D.D.”, he is wearing a large hat and hat with his own head in it. It is impossible to believe himâlike the man in this picture only in his clothes or his head in his hat.
This is why there is no one who can give you an exact impression of what Jimâs looks like when he takes his hat off and off, and is dressed up in a suit and ties while he does these things.
We can compare this image to a typical image of Jim from the 1920s from his book Black Country Historyâs Illustrated by William H. Ransom:
The next page shows this “Menswear” style. His hat, hat, hat, head. This is the man who was wearing all the clothes he could stand and was standing upright. In fact, it was for the purpose of being out of view.
Some believe that the fact of Jim âs hat is one that is almost to some extent symbolic of the slave spirit. One of this is that Jim and he used to wear a colored hat. One of these hats was made by Ransom himself in 1857 (the first time Jim was shown wearing a hat or vest in the US history). These were colored hatlets made from blackened wood.
But why do you think that these hats were made into this hat in the