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Controversial American Literary Analysis

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The value of controversial American literature is of great importance to society. Controversial novels helps readers see into the past and to understand it in a more suitable way. Readers see that occasionally society puts a grasp on people, but every now and then there are people who move more towards community. In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, we see two different protagonists attempt to help two black men. The society sees this as horrible to their people, while some people, like the protagonists, manage to escape the grasp of society and move into a community of righteousness. The novels were both banned for their foul language and tackling the issues surround black rights. The …show more content…

He goes through numerous moral dilemmas such as helping a slave escape even though when he was younger, he was taught to disregard anyone who was black. The book is told from a first person perspective and written in a southern vernacular. That being said the language and racism depicted in the book is frequent. Some people like Dr. John H. Wallace have said that this is, “the grotesque of example racist trash ever written” (Shipp). The use of the n-word in this novel is frequent, but it shows a clear statement of how black people were treated in Southern 1800s. Furthermore, the uneducated dialect that Huck uses to tell the story is hard to understand and for a long time thought as a crude way to represent the southern society. In general critics from the South saw this book as evil and hated it for downsizing the southern ideals they grew up to appreciate. This kind of criticism started popping up again seventy five years later after Harper Lee chose to take on some southern …show more content…

Their society was a racist society that saw black people more as property than as human beings. Atticus and Huck helped shed light on how the perceptions of society were flawed. They also shed a better light on black people and helped to show how they were just as smart and capable as white people. The reader gets a sense, through satire and misconceptions, that the black man always has it rough in any kind of situation. The books use the dialect which was used in the South and paint a realistic picture of the society, some people praise that, others

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