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Satire In Huckleberry Finn

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Huck, the narrator of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is young, naïve, and rather an outsider of society; this allows Twain to impart stronger commentary on society. Huck’s outsider status and naïveté presents a forgivable narrator, one who saying something crass or shocking about society is not a product of their character, but one of their situations. Readers are more apt to forgive comments on society if they perceive them as “innocent” in this case that the narrator, Huck, doesn’t truly know what he’s saying. Huck’s naïveté allows him to convey Twain’s comments on society based on his experiences and without judgment, allowing the reader to form their own judgments, such as when Huck “wanted to smoke and asked the widow to let me.

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