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9 - Bleeping Mark Twain?: Censorship, Huckleberry Finn, and the Functions of Literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2023

Robert T. Tally Jr
Affiliation:
Texas State University, San Marcos
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Summary

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is perhaps the most famous, most beloved, and most controversial novel featuring a prominent Black character and written by a white author. Extremely popular in its own day and in the decades that followed, Mark Twain’s novel became one of the most holy of the canonical texts of American literature once mid-twentieth-century critics discovered in it the key to the American experience and an uplifting illustration of the American spirit. When the influential critic Lionel Trilling, in The Liberal Imagination, asserted that Huck Finn and Jim formed a “community of saints,” he effectively established the novel as national monument. However, the eupeptic effect of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn on the body politic is not as indisputable as many of its apologists would have it, and during the last forty years controversies have arisen over use of the novel in the classroom, particularly given the frequent appearance in the book of a well-known, and offensive, racial epithet. The story is presented as a meandering and quixotic tale of a poor, white boy and his boon companion, a runaway slave, as they make their way down river, deeper and deeper into the slave-holding South, until they reach a problematic but seemingly happy ending, in which the adventures come to an abrupt end with Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn playing a dangerous game with Jim. It is then discovered that, unbeknownst to both Huck and his companion, Jim had already been set free, and so he was not a runaway slave after all, at which point Jim almost disappears from the text entirely. Twain’s Mississippi River odyssey, with its local color and vaudevillestyled humor, is narrated by Huck himself, who manages to refer to Jim and to all African Americans by one of the most offensive terms in the modern English language, and he does so over two hundred times in a relatively short book. For many readers, particularly in a classroom setting, the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is therefore a work that causes embarrassment, pain, and resentment. As a hypercanonized text, one that has been frequently included as required reading not only in college courses, but also in high school and even earlier, Twain’s 1884–85 novel continues to be a crucial site for discussions of race in the United States today.

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Chapter
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The Critical Situation
Vexed Perspectives in Postmodern Literary Studies
, pp. 147 - 158
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2023

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