Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a novel by Mark Twain. From the beginning of the novel, Twain makes it clear that Huck is a boy who comes from the lowest levels of white society and the novel is racist on the face.It is racism and slavery.
Jim is one of Miss Watson’s household slaves. Jim is superstitious and occasionally sentimental, but he is also intelligent, practical, and ultimately more of an adult than anyone else in the novel. Jim’s frequent acts of selflessness, his longing for his family, and his friendship with both Huck and Tom demonstrate to Huck that humanity has nothing to do with race. Because Jim is a black man and a runaway slave, he is at the mercy of almost all the other characters in the novel and is often forced into ridiculous and degrading situations and Mary Jane, Susan, and Joanna are about to inherit the family estate since their mom and dad passed away the year before.
The difference between a thiap compared Jim and the three sisters. We will obviously black will be your slave or servant, until there are no more living to bring money. They will need to get in order to get money to buy and use in daily life and struggling to earn money themselves because there are no properties that are in between their parents.But, white people most often was born in a rich family. They don't get paid in order to earn money for ships drag your mom and dad have created them.
Humans are fascinated with real life situations, tagged in with fictional story line. Mark Twain’s novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, describes real life situations, in a fictional story line perfectly. Twain put the real life happenings of slavery, in a fun and fictional story. The novel is mainly about the racial relations between each human. Classes of society, loyalty/friendship, and rebellion shows how the novel evolves into a main theme of Race Relations.
What you find in Twain is the opposite: a lively affection and admiration for black Americans that began when he was still a boy and grew steadily through the years. And on those occasions when Twain does venture to compare blacks and whites, the comparison is not conspicuously flattering to the whites. "One of my theories is that the hearts of men are about alike, all over the world, whatever their skin-complexions may be."