How Is Huckleberry Finn Relevant

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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a great American novel that talks about contradictory topics. These themes are still relevant even today, making it timeless. Racism one of the fundamental ideas that the literary work explores and actually exposes. Twain reveals the hypocrisy of slavery, demonstrating how racism disfigures the image of the people doing the oppressing equally as much as it does to those who are oppressed. In the novel, Miss Watson and Sally Phelps may seem like “good” white people to most readers. But if you look again, they show no concern about the injustice of slavery or the cruelty of separating Jim and his family, despite his apparent sadness and distress. The idea of a permanent separation from them makes him consider

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