Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Lord Of The Flies Essays (784 words) - Literature, Fiction
  Lord of the Flies    Annonymous    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is, not and  should not, be considered a child's story. A story like this may corrupt  a young child's mind. It deals with adult themes and concepts that are  generally not suitable for young children. Als o, if used as a child's  story it may confuse them or give them the wrong idea about slavery and  the terminology of the time.    First of all, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is extremely  inappropriate for children because it may put bad ideas into a young  impressionable mind. At the young age of about twelve, Huck is roaming  around the woods all by himself and later on is flo ating aimlessly down  the Mississippi River with a bunch of criminals. Huck is living what may  appear to the children to be a very exciting and glamorous life. Most  parents would never steer their children the wrong way in life, don't want  to tell childr en about a kid around their age or little older than they  are that is homeless and basically cheating and stealing to survive. This  novel explains in depth about various scams such as the Wilks brothers  scam, and the teaching schools like the dancing sch ool or yellow  cution. In addition to the royal nonesuch plays which teach children  that all you need to do is take the money and run like the King and the    Duke did. After reading this novel the majority of children won't go out  and try to scam their n eighbors. However, it may seem like an appealing  lifestyle for them. It may also give them the impression that being a con  man for a living, or being homeless and wandering is a wonderful and  glorious carefree lifestyle, and because your Mommy or Daddy tells it to  you, it must not be the wrong thing to do.    In addition to giving the wrong idea about life, it is a brutal  and vulgar book that children should not be exposed to. There are a  couple of deaths like when Colonel Sherburn kills a harmless town drunk  named Boggs. Earlier on Huck is staying with a the Grangerford family  that is in the middle of a feud with the Shepherdson family. Buck, the  youngest child, is about Huck's age. Buck speaks of murdering all of the    Shepherdsons for a reason he doesn't even know of. Eventually Buck is  killed by a She pherdson right in front of Huck's eyes. The King and the    Duke are tarred and feathered later on and Huck doesn't really think twice  about it. Huck also encounters a wreck on the river with two criminals on  it that are going to leave a third one on there   to die. Not to forget the alcoholic and abusive father that is killed in  a whore house. Which is just another example of how vulgar this story is.    Furthermore, not only is the plot very adult, the language is also  unsuitable for children. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn takes place in  the pre-civil war south. At this time slavery is very common and is  condoned by society. Black people were tho ugh of as property and treated  extremely poorly and inhumanly. When Huck makes up the story on why he,  Tom, was late getting to Aunt Sally's house he explains that a cylinder  head had blown up. When Aunt Sally asked if anyone was hurt Tom says  that nobody was hurt, just a couple of niggers were killed. Aunt Sally  was relieved and said good, because sometimes people get hurt. This is  an example of how black people were treated. Not as real people but as  property or luggage. Huck would have gott en a similar reaction if he  told her that someone had their suitcase broken. The niggers were left  to live in shacks near the Phelp's house. Treating black people that way  is not a setting a good example for today's youth.    We've all made mistakes and the United States made a huge one with  slavery, reading to your kids about niggers being killed and treating  niggers as servants is not helping us teach today's children that  slavery and racism are a bad thing. Another th ing that is unsuitable for  children is the excessive use of the word nigger. This was a book  written a long time ago and nigger may have been a common term to use.    However, we shouldn't teach children in today's society to call black  people niggers.    In conclusion, Huck Finn is not a child's book and    
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