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    Satire in Huckleberry Finn In the novel “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain, we are told a story about a young boy and his slave companion’s journey down the Mississippi River and all of their encounters with other characters. Twain constructed a beautiful narrative on how young Huck Finn, the protagonist in the story, learns about the world and from other adult characters, how he is shaped into his own person. At the time this book was made however, this novel provided serious social

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    River on a raft. Ever since the novel’s publication, debate amongst critics has ensued over whether Mark Twain displays his own racist tendencies in his literary work. Twain’s use of his Huckleberry Finn and Jim in the plot along with use of social satire prove that he is not racist. Twain fashions Jim as an admirable character who readers can relate to, which is a clear indication that Twain did not conform to racist standards of his time. Throughout the novel, Jim displays high moral character

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    oblivious to the practice, and even to the national psyche and the idea of what being an American was. Among the central aim of the novel, Twain points out the ways in which hypocrisy is present in white society, particularly in terms of race. Through satire, Twain shares his beliefs about slavery and human nature and other topics that plagued the country at the time. A large part of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is Twain’s satirical treatment of white people and the way in which his smoldering

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    father, and partners up with a runaway slave named Jim. As the story progresses, Jim and Huck develop a deep friendship, and Huck begins to value Jim as an independent human, breaking away from his southern way of thinking. The novel explores and satires many aspects of “American life” at that time including civilization’s hypocrisy, as demonstrated by slavery, civilization, human nature, and greed. Throughout the course of the book, Twain mocks, and points out society’s greed through the actions

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    Equality then and now Progress is measured by time some people say, but how much time does it take for humans to have equality for everyone around the world? In 1792, Jonathan Swift drafted an essay “A Modest Proposal” to bring awareness of a particular group of people being mistreated and victimized. Fast forward 284 years later, Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech “I Have a Dream” bringing more public awareness of another group of people being mistreated and victimized. Today, 52 years later

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    During the late seventeenth century in Ireland, the nation suffered as a result of deplorable living standards and poverty. The ruling caste, consisting of English landlords and politicians that emigrated to Ireland, failed to implement any attempts to better the conditions faced by the families starving. Many individuals, such as William Petty, penned works to supposedly solve the problems dominating Ireland. Petty reduced the denizens of Ireland to simple statistics that should receive a monetary

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    lady’s dressing room and exhibits how literature has the ability to take private matters into the public sphere, in this case, ones that are applied directly to the female sex. The question is, whether or not Swift intended to target women in his satire for entertainment, or if he was displaying misogynistic beliefs. According to Swift, women are purely artificial, they appear to be creatures of beauty, but underneath, exhibit vile habits and act opposite of what they appear to be in society. By

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    extremely crucial. W.H. Auden 's "The Unknown Citizen" reflects criticism of collectivism and promotes individualism, because Auden depicts that the unknown man has no freedom or happiness under a collective form of society. Basically, "the poem is a satire of standardization at the expense of individualism” (Haffenden). Standardization defines as to implement and develop standards. In this poem, the government implements many systems, such as ‘Producers Research’ or ‘High-Grade Living’ in order to standardize

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    Over time as people grow and learn new things, they develop morally. In the novel, “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”, Mark Twain depicts society through the eyes of a young boy, and the reality that is thrown at him throughout his journey. Huck’s journey creates a clearer image of the morals that are part of everyday life, or as defined by Webster Dictionary, the “beliefs about what is right behavior and what is wrong behavior.” The beginning of his journey starts off with a large part of Huck’s

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    Rene Denfeld’s novel The Enchanted applies a creative method of storytelling to an intriguing subject. While discussing the corrupt inner workings of a prison, the unfortunate and sickening lives of all the characters, and what justice happens to be, Denfeld alludes to several other works to help her express the points being made. Due to the narrative aspects of this novel the reader is subjected to a wide range of emotions including sympathy, sorrow, and scorn and kept in the dark while somehow

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