Monday, March 18, 2019

Mark Twains Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Escape From an Oppressive

Huckleberry Finn - Escape From a Cruel and Oppressive Societythe States... bolt down of the surplus and home of the brave the utopian society which every European citizen desired to be a part of in the 18th and nineteenth centuries. The revolutionary ideas of The Age of Enlightenment such as democracy and frequent male suffrage were finally becoming a reality to the philosophers and scholars that so elegantly dreamt of them. America was a playground for the ideas of these enlightened men. To Europeans, and the world for that matter, America had become a kind of mirage, an idealistic version of society, a post of open opportunities. Where else on earth could a man like J. D. Rockefeller lift from the streets to become one of the richest men of his time? America stood for ideals like life, liberty, and the hunting of happiness. People in America had an almost unconditional independence freedom to worship, write, speak, and live in any manner that so pleased them. notwith standing was this freedom for everyone? Was America, the utopia for the millions of common men from around world, as great as the philosophers and scholars fantasized? America, as a society, as a country, and as a draw was not as picture perfect as Europeans believed. The United States, low all the gold plating, carried a burden of unsolved national problems, oddly racial. The deep scar of slavery had left a dent in the seemingly impenetrable armor of the country. From the times of early colonization to the new-fangled 19th century, Africans had been brought over by the thousands in overcrowded and unsanitary slave ships. They were exchange like cattle to the highest bidder, an inhumane and despicable act that America, land of the free and home of the brave, allowed to happen... ...1997. 14-17. Leavis, F. R. Viewpoints. Twentieth Century Interpretations of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Englewood Cliffs, new(a) Jersey Prentice-Hall Inc., 1968. 109-11. Mailloux, Ste ven. Reading Huckleberry Finn. untried Essays on Huckleberry Finn. New York Cambridge University Press, 1985. 107-30. Marx, Leo. Mr. Eliot, Mr. Tilling, and Huckleberry Finn. American Scholar 22. (Aut 1953) 423-40. McKay, Janet H. An Art So High. New Essays on Huckleberry Finn. New York Cambridge University Press, 1985. 61-81. Walker, Nancy. Reformers and Young Maidens Women and Virtue. Modern Critical Interpretations. New York Chelsea nursing home Publishers, 1968. 76-85. Wright, James. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Great Writers of the English Language American Classics. North Bellmore, New York marshal Cavendish Corporation, 1991. 12-17.

No comments:

Post a Comment