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American Literature: Huckleberry Finn: Road Trip 10416 Views


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Transcript

00:02

Like a road trip but wetter....

00:28

A lot of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn take place on me the [River discussing Huckleberry Finn]

00:32

Mississippi River there's plenty of action along the way scoundrels, thieves

00:37

and slave hunters to dodge but what are we really doing out here besides all [Jim and Finn standing on a raft]

00:42

that well we're on what literary types like to refer to as the road trip motif

00:47

just when you thought road trips were all about spring break in the wide world [Man in a swimming pool and his trunks float away]

00:51

of storytelling the road trip serves several purposes first and foremost it's

00:56

a way of using the hero's journey archetype which stories have used since

01:00

stories first started being a you know a thing think odysseus, Star Wars, the Bible

01:06

or even Batman well the hero's journey follows a basic

01:10

formula the hero gets a call to adventure they meet up with a mentor or [Adventure calling a cell phone]

01:14

guardian encounter challenges all along the way undergo some sort of

01:19

transformation usually a spiritual one then they go back home the end clearly [Woman exits a taxi and walks towards home]

01:25

Twain made use of this classic archetype when writing Huck Finn, Hucks the hero

01:29

Jim and the civilized folks are the mentors the river journey is the action

01:34

and the Dukan King business along with the feuding families certainly caused

01:39

conflict and Huck has his crisis of conscience when he realizes that the [Huck gasps as Jim fades travels away on a raft]

01:44

right thing to do is let Jim be a free man and then they go back home nope that

01:49

part doesn't happen no one said the archetype has to stick to its formula

01:52

like chaw on your shoe.. Twain deviates from the traditional hero's journey by

01:57

letting Huck ride you know float off into the sunset instead of [Huck and Jim floating into sunset]

02:01

returning home to his hateful abusive father also Pap, his father's dead now

02:06

well that wouldn't really work anyway would it? Twain also used the road trip

02:10

slash hero's journey idea as a tool of characterization

02:13

think about it the United States is a big place and different types of

02:18

people live in different regions of the country like you know Eskimos in Alaska [Group of eskimos in Alaska]

02:23

beach bums in Florida and farmers Midwest well not only do people believe

02:28

in slightly different things or wear different clothes they speak in

02:32

different ways as well so as Huck and Jim travel downstream on [Huck and Jim travelling downstream on a raft]

02:35

the mighty Mississippi they encounter different folks with different lives and

02:38

way different ways of speaking like these choice phrases from chapter 12 and

03:01

what? come again this isn't nonsense it's what [Mississippi river discussing book]

03:07

we like to call dialect language that you'll only hear in a certain part of

03:10

the world or spoken by a specific set of people

03:13

here's another....

03:23

Well first of all only those civilized folks call

03:26

Huck by his full first name that tells us something about who's speaking here

03:30

we can also tell that's character speaking is an authority figure since [Miss Watson appears]

03:33

they're throwing down commands like nobody's business and the character has

03:36

something of an education because Twain didn't write them by using a specific

03:40

dialect what we're reading is more or less basic English dialect is a fun

03:44

little way to characterize a character's because it lets the reader know all [Person picks up Huckleberry Finn book]

03:49

sorts of traits about them without the author coming right out and saying these

03:53

things... In those delightful first passages above the characters are

03:56

lowdown murderous, thieving fools aka bad guys...Twain writes this dialogue in a

04:02

dialect that shows they're uneducated and in this case they're clearly up to

04:06

no good but just because these fools were foolish it doesn't mean that they [Image of man pointing a gun at a man on the floor]

04:11

didn't also have some wise things to say being uneducated doesn't necessarily

04:16

equate to being unwise and in the second example miss Watson is ordering Huck

04:20

around using his full name to show that she means business..Here's a

04:24

third example, this is the way Twain wrote Jim's dialect...

04:48

....now when we know Jim's a slave

04:50

which means he's not been allowed the chance to have any education..The other

04:53

really important thing to note about the way Twain wrote the very dialect is that [Dialect floating in river]

04:57

besides being a super effective tool of characterization it's also how he's

05:02

created a voice for the books narrator Huck himself...

05:05

Huck's a kid and he's been through some tough stuff in life these are factors

05:10

which shape how he sees the world around him and how he tells the tale of his

05:14

experiences were an older more civilized narrator the telling this story it would

05:19

have to be written in a totally different way probably like how much [Miss Watson appears as Huck is sitting at a table with a bowl of food]

05:22

Watson speaks we lose a lot of the characterization as it stands now so

05:26

it's a good thing Twain opted to write this story in the way that he did even

05:29

though Twain differentiates the characters through dialect his

05:32

underlying commentary and a major theme in this book is that people are alike [Girl flicking through a book]

05:37

everywhere we made different thoughts morals, molars and the way we speak

05:42

everyone lets their own preconceptions color their approach to the world the [Girl wearing 3D glasses in a movie theater]

05:47

road trip or river trip more accurately here

05:50

let's Twain show us that people are alike all over they never look past

05:54

their front yard as the king so eloquently says...

06:06

What he means is that fools are everywhere no [Man sits down on a train and a clown appears]

06:08

matter where you go..they're they are... well above all the road trip story

06:12

is very American it takes a hero's journey but puts a

06:15

very red white and blue spin on it America is a big country lots of roads [Cars travelling down a highway]

06:19

lots of rivers lots of things to see we spent most of the 19th century

06:24

stampeding madly towards California in what's known as a national road trip

06:29

that took up a huge chunk of our history it's no wonder that Twain used it as a

06:34

blueprint to talk about American life and values you know for

06:37

better or worse tons of other writers have done the same in fact you can

06:41

probably find a road trip story to fit every mood

06:44

Steinbeck did it with The Grapes of Wrath and travels with Charlie... Kerouac [Road trip book examples appear]

06:48

did it with on the road you can even go with Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas or

06:53

the electric kool-aid acid test if drug abuse by proxy is your thing all of them

06:58

took at least some of their cues and inspiration from Huck Finn not just

07:01

because it's a seriously great story but because here on the Mississippi we do [Mississippi river transforms into a hypnotic trance]

07:06

trippin' in the right way

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