1. Moral Direction and Racism - Huck Finn
Huck Finn renders this requirement complete because it highlights the racist society that was ubiquitous throughout pre-Civil War South, while bringing out the raw emotional aspect to the novel, and adding another dimension to the objective history lessons taught in a classroom. ... Huckleberry Finn fits this criterion by demonstrating Huck's moral journey of breaking away from society's morality towards discovering his own. ... Despite the highly controversial elements tied to racism present in Huck Finn, the book gives high school students an unadulterated sense and different persp...
- Word Count: 2046
- Approx Pages: 8
- Has Bibliography
- Grade Level: Undergraduate