In his novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, renowned author Mark Twain satirically conveys his disappointment in the corruption of society by revealing how greed leads to the self-destructive behavior of men. Throughout this novel, a young Southern boy, Huck, and his companion, Jim, encounters many people who were affected by greed. Greed, for money or power, can alter and make people do peculiar things to achieve their goal. Twain utilizes satirical elements such as mockery, absurdity, and irony to prove his purpose by which greed drives people to do unspeakable things to get what they want.
To begin with, Twain incorporates mockery when relaying an incident where people were searching for runaway slave Jim, because they heard about…