Monday, January 27, 2014

Huck Finn Episodes 5/6/7 summary

Episode 5: The Feud (Chapters 17-18)
-Huck washes up on shore
-Huck adopts the name “George Jackson”
-Huck is basically adopted by the Sheperdsons
-The Sheperdsons and the enemy family the Grangerfords go to church together
-Sophia Grangerford asks Huck to grab her bible from the church
-Huck finds a not with “half-past two” written on it
-Hucks servant brings Huck to the swamp and says he wanted to show him some water-moccasins
-Huck finds Jim there
-Sophia ran off with Harney Shepherdson
-Buck is killed in a gunfight
Huck and Jim escape down the river on their still functional raft
Episode 6: Introduction to the Duke and King (Chapters 19-20)
-Jim and Huck pick up two men who are being chased
-The younger man claims he is a duke, whilst the older man says he is a king
-Huck knows the men are lying, but decides not to say anything because he doesn’t want to cause and quarrels
Huck lies about his family being dead and Jim being his slave
-They go to a religious revival meeting
-The king tells the crowd he is a former pirate and gets over 80 dollars in donations
-The duke prints up a leaflet about a reward for Jim’s capture as their cover story, so this allows them to travel during the day
Episode 7: Boggs, Sherburn, Circus, and The Royal Nonesuch(Chapters 21-23)
-The duke and the king work on their acting
-They murder the “To be, or not to be” soliloquy
-They land in a town in Arkansas
-A drunken man is killed for saying rude things about a man called Sherburn
-A mob forms and goes to the home of Sherburn
-Sherburn talks the men out of killing him by saying a real man would do it discreetly and at night
-Huck visits a circus and there’s a joke with a “drunk” man that he doesn’t understand
-No one shows up to see the Duck and the King’s play so they change it so it’s an adult show (no women or children)
-House is packed
-King is naked and wearing body paint
-Show is too short and the people in the crowd feel ripped off
-Crowd wants everyone in the town to feel ripped off
-Rinse and repeat
-Third night the townsfolk come again with things to throw at the preformers
-Preformers escape
-Jim tells Huck about beating his deaf daughter and how bad he feels

-Everyone cries

Friday, January 17, 2014

13. Huck and Jim's manner of dress on the raft is symbolic. What do clothes represent?
The restrictive nature of clothes represents society's overpowering ways. Huck and Jim's lack of clothing represents that they are free on the raft, and society has no power over them there.

14. Why doesn't Huck expose the Duke and the King (Dauphin) as frauds?
He thought the best way to get along with people was to go along with whatever they wanted. He would rather pretend to believe their fake backstories than get into a quarrel with them.

15. Who is the most shrewd, the King and the Duke or Huck? Why? Give some examples.
Huck is the most clever and resourceful of the group. Although he isn't completely book smart, he outwits many people and survives through that. For example, he figures out how to spell his name by challenging another boy by saying he bets the other boy wouldn't be able to. He adopts several stories to save himself and Jim.

16. What does Twain satirize in the plan to present Romeo and Juliet? Discuss Romeo and Juliet as a motif.
He is making fun of Romeo and Juliet because it is a very romantic piece. His continual mocking of shakespeare reinforces his distaste for romanticizing death and family battles.

17. Discuss the significance of the pirate and the revival meeting. What is Twain satirizing?
In the revival meeting, Twain was satirizing religion and how silly it made made people act. He is stating that religious people will buy any bogus story if the con man can convince them it's in the name of Christ.

18. Is Twain making a statement about society through the antics of the King and Duke? Explain.
He's talking about the evils of society and how people will do anything for their own personal gain.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Huck Discussion Questions: XV - XVII

Huck Discussion Questions: XV - XVII

1. Discuss the significance of the fog incident and Jim's interpretation of it. "The lot of towheads was troubles we was going to get into with quarrelsome people and all kinds of mean folks, but if we minded our business and didn't talk back and aggravate them, we would pull through and get out of the fog and into the big clear river, which was the free states, and wouldn't have no more trouble" (64). Consider the major themes as well as foreshadowing.
The fog and the muddy river represent the fog of slavery, while the clear skies and waters show the clarity and niceness of freedom. Up until this point, Jim's freedom has still seemed far away while in southern waters. They are so close to freedom for both of them, and they're just beginning to realize it.

2. How does Huck feel about playing the trick on Jim? Comment: "It was fifteen minutes before I could work myself up and humble myself to a nigger; but I done it, and I warn't sorry for it afterwards, neither" (65). How does this statement contribute to the overall meaning of the novel?
Huck feels guilty after tricking Jim because by this point in the novel, Huck has realized that Jim is a real person with feelings. This contributes to the overall meaning because Huck has changed his viewpoint on Jim, and it shows that society is incorrect in its dehumanization of black people. 

3. Discuss the significance of the following quotes from Chapter XVI:

"Jim said it made him all over trembly and feverish to be so close to freedom. Well, it made me all trembly and feverish, too, to hear him because I begun to get it through my head that he was most free -- and who was to blame for it? Why me. I couldn't get it out of my conscience, no how nor no way." (66).
In this time period, slavery was the normal thing. Helping free slaves was considered morally wrong to almost all southerners, Huck included.

"Here was this nigger which I as good as helped to run away, coming right out flat-footed and saying he would steal his children -- children that belonged to a man I didn't even know; a man that hadn't ever done me no harm." (67). Explain the irony in this quote as well as the significance.
Huck already felt bad about helping free Jim, and he thinks that slaves are still property. Although the children are Jim’s biologically, Huck thinks they belong to the man and if Jim steals his children back, it’ll be like Huck helping steal from a man he doesn’t even know. This is ironic because you would think that Jim would be allowed to have his children back because that is what society today is like, but in this time period he is with less rights.

"Well, then, says I, what's the use you learning to do right, when it's troublesome to do right and ain't no trouble to do wrong, and the wages is just the same?" (69).
Huck is saying it’s easier to do wrong than right, and that he won’t tattle tale on Jim because he’d feel the same confliction with or without ratting out his friend. He feels guilty about wanting to turn Jim in, but it's easier to keep moving on than abandon his friend. He is trying to justify his feelings about not turning in Jim, and trying to comfort himself.

"Doan' less' talk about it, Huck. Po' niggers can't have no luck. I awluz 'spected dat rattle-snake skin warn't done wid its work." (70).
This brings back the theme of superstition, and how luck was an important part of life in this time period. It's ironic because Huck and Jim have escaped so many problems.

4. Why do the bounty hunters give Huck money? What is ironic about their reaction to Huck's story? 
Because Huck says his dad is sick, and they’re pretty much paying him to stay away, as well as pay for his father to get help. This is ironic because they were very willing to help them out but as soon as they learned of the supposed sickness on board, all they wanted was to get away.

5. What does the destruction of the "naturally" created raft by the "industrially" created steamboat symbolize?
It shows that society runs over the nature of freedom. It shows the natural state of man versus society.

6. Speculate on why Twain put Huckleberry Finn aside for a few years at the end of XVI?
He was busy making bad investments, and he didn't know where he was going with the story.

7. Describe the Grangerford house. What is satirical about the furnishings, art, and poetry? What does this description say about the Grangerfords?
The Grangerfords house is large and very decorated, with art depicting romanticized sadness and death. The poetry is equally depressing. Their house is expensively furnished, which shows that the family is old and has a lot of money. It also shows how classy they are, and that highlights how silly their feud is.

8. The first part of Chapter XVII reveals an example of the theme of Huck playing on Buck's gullibility. Discuss this example as well as other examples of the novel's major themes evident in Chapters XVI & XVII.
Huck uses Buck to help him know how to spell his name correctly, even though it wasn't quite the correct. This shows how clever Huck is, because he is stealthily gaining information about his character in case he needs to know it in the future. He came up with the small pox story, showing he was quick on his toes.

9. What does Huck's reaction to "Moses and the candle" indicate? Discuss the meaning of "Moses" as a motif in the novel. 
Huck didn’t understand the joke, much like he doesn’t understand people’s interest in religion and stories about people who had been dead for centuries. Moses represents Huck because kind strangers took both in. Moses led the Hebrews to freedom, and goes against his egyptian upbringing. Huck is leading Jim to freedom, and goes against his southern upbringing. They are both going against society to do what is right.

10. What does Twain satirize in his description of the church service and the hogs that sleep under the floor?
Both families go to church together and agree that the sermon about brotherly love was well spoken. This is funny because even though they get along fine in church, they are nasty to each other outside the holy walls. The Hogs think it's nice and cool in the church and will go any time, while humans only go when they have to (Sundays).


11. What does the feud symbolize? Does this remind you of another famous piece of literature? Explain. Through the feud incident, Twain satirizes human traits and behaviors. Discuss. 

The feud symbolizes the Southern obsession with honor. Miss Sophia Grangerford ran off to marry Harney Shepherdson, a man from the rival family. This is like Romeo and Juliet, where Miss Sophia is a Capulet and Harney is a Montague. They are star-crossed lovers like their Italian counterparts, and the heart wants like the heart wants.


12. "I was powerful glad to get away from the feuds, and so was Jim to get away from the swamp. We said there warn't no home like a raft, after all. Other places do seem so clamped up and smothery, but a raft don't. You feel mighty free and easy and comfortable on a raft"(88). Discuss the paradox. Furthermore, this excerpt from the final paragraph of Chapter XVIII is significant in that it pertains to the major themes of the novel. Explain.
Huck and Jim both enjoy the wide-open waters of the Mississippi, and don't like being stuck in a certain area for long amounts of time. They're both free on the raft, away from their troubles. The paradox is how small the raft is and how it is physically more cramped than any house

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Episodes 1-4 Outline

Episode 1: Tom's Gang (chapters 1-4)
-Huck is told Tom is going to the bad place (hell) and Huck says he’d rather go there than the good place (heaven) and be without his friend
-Huck is compared to Moses
-Huck and Tom play a trick on Jim and make him think he’s been abducted by witches by hanging his hat on the branch above his head
-Huck, Tom, and a few other boys create a gang
-They talk about murdering people and making the women fall in love with them
-They plan on robbing gypsies but they end up being a group of Sunday school children
-Huck gives his money to Judge Thatcher because he knows he Pap will show up and spend it all
Episode 2: Huck and Pap (chapters 5-7)
-Pap shows up
-Pap is always drunk
-Pap gets arrested and falls off a roof
-Pap imprisons Huck in a cabin
-Legal fight over Huck: a Judge won’t allow the Widow to have Huck because Pap is family and they don’t want to separate family
-Huck finds a canoe and escapes from the cabin
-Huck stages his own death and float down to Jackson Island
Episode 3: Jackson Island (chapters 8-11)
-Huck investigates a fire he hears on the island
-Huck finds Jim on the island
-Jim has run away because he knew he would be sold south if he didn’t
-Jim and Huck move up to a cave because it was going to rain
-Huck puts a dead snake in Jim’s bed and the mate bites Jim
-Huck and Jim ransack a house floating down the river and find a dead man inside
-Huck goes to St. Petersburg disguised as a girl and finds a woman whose husband is going to the island that night to find Jim
Episode 4: The River (Chapters 12-16)
-Jim and Huck set off down the river
-They find a wrecked ship and find gangsters on board
-Their raft floats away
-They steal the gangster’s boat
-They find the raft
-Huck and Jim get separated because Jim went around one side of the island and Huck around the other
-They are reunited and Huck pretends like it was just a dream Jim had
-Jim realizes it actually did happen and gets offended, and Huck decides to stop playing tricks on Jim
-Huck eavesdrops on a big raft full of men fighting and listens to a story about a baby in a barrel
-Huck is going to turn Jim in
-Huck is stopped by men in boats who ask who’s on the raft and want to go see
-Huck implies the man onboard has small pox
-The men give him $40 and leave
-They lose the canoe while they were sleeping

- Their raft gets destroyed by a steamboat and Huck and Jim get separated again

Monday, January 6, 2014

1. What kind of men do Huck and Jim find on the steamboat? Why are the men there?
Murders
To ransack the wreckage and kill the person who keeps threatening to tattle tale on their whole operation

2. What is the name of the boat Huck and Jim land on?  Why is this funny?
The boat was called Walter Scott, which is funny because it is the name of a novelist whose works were romantic, unlike Twain's works. Twain was mocking the novelist by making him named after a sinking ship. Twain jokingly blamed Scott's romantic writings for the development of the southern character.

3. Discuss the difference between "real" adventures and Tom's adventures?
Tom's adventures were often elaborate and made up. Real adventures were more life-threatening and dangerous and not quite as fun as Tom's were.


4. What is the plan once they reach Cairo?
Sell the raft and hop on a steamboat heading further into the north