Sunday, March 4, 2012

Semester 2 - Open Prompt Revision 3


1992. In a novel or play, a confidant (male) or a confidante (female) is a character, often a friend or relative of the hero or heroine, whose role is to be present when the hero or heroine needs a sympathetic listener to confide in. Frequently the result is, as Henry James remarked, that the confidant or confidante can be as much "the reader's friend as the protagonist's." However, the author sometimes uses this character for other purposes as well. Choose a confidant or confidante from a novel or play of recognized literary merit and write an essay in which you discuss the various ways this character functions in the work. You may write your essay on one of the following novels or plays or on another of comparable quality. Do not write on a poem or short story.
                 
            Characters in novels don’t require confidants – they could just as easily confide in the reader himself, or keep all emotions bottled up. When an author includes a confidant, however, he forces the reader to draw conclusions as a third party hidden from the characters. In Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck and Jim are placed in isolation throughout their adventures, compelling Huck to confide often in his travelling companion. While he’s not the brightest character in the book, especially when juxtaposed against more literate characters, Jim serves as a friend, protector, and father figure to his young companion. These functions give Jim a greater purpose in the plot than simply a convenient place for Huck to dump his feelings, and give the reader perspective into Twain’s motives in this novel.  
             Huck escapes from his drunkard father, Pap, at the beginning of the novel, causing him to be without a father figure. Jim, already knowing the ropes of fatherhood from the family he left behind, steps into that role for Huck. When the two first find the abandoned boathouse with the body inside, Jim doesn’t allow Huck to see the corpse for fear of scarring the child. Jim also provides food for the two of them, and he keeps Huck from knowing of Pap’s death for as long as possible. These actions demonstrate not only Jim’s ability to act as an adult, but also his ability to act in the best interest of a child who is not even his own. Twain often uses Jim to remind the reader that the narrator, Huck, is a child who requires adult supervision, thus introducing an element of suspicion in the reader when it comes to Huck’s explanations.
            One major theme of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn involves the meaning and purpose of slavery in society during the nineteenth century. Twain uses Jim to reinforce this theme by giving him a mentorship position for a innocent, white child. Because Jim is an escaped slave, Huck battles with whether or not he should turn Jim in. He decides against it, and this allows him to muse over whether slavery is correct or not; musings that, ultimately, can subtly change the opinion of many racist readers of that time. As his relationship with Jim grows, Huck sees more wisdom in Jim than he ever saw in his own father. Their relationship is the basis through which Twain shows society that slavery is a serious misjudgment on the part of Caucasians; with Huck interacting so closely with a slave, the social wrongdoings of the time are willingly pointed out from an innocent child’s standpoint.
            Mark Twain didn’t write about Huck Finn and his escaped-slave-turned-best-friend Jim to make the reader feel good. He wrote about the two because he knew it would make a social point that he could not make on his own with his firmly entrenched position as an abolitionist. Jim serves as a literal father figure, protector, and confidant of Huck, but furthermore as an actor, one who can be watched by Huck, to open the eyes of Twain’s contemporaries to the horrors of racism. 

2 comments:

  1. Again, you could benefit from sharpening the critical points you make in your essay. Your introduction is very vague, never specifically stating Twain's message, or the purpose that Jim serves. This uncertainty is translated through the rest of the essay. By the last few sentences of the third paragraph you have clearly established your ideas and begun to answer he prompt, but because of this it is much less fleshed out than it could be. t almost seems that your conclusion would make a better introduction than your actual intro. Good novel choice, and in depth analysis (by the end)

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  2. This essay seems pretty good, but not as good as the rest I have read so far. You should definitely repeat what you think the author's meaning is more than one time so that it is clear to the audience because at first it was difficult for me to find. You made some very good points about the book, and it was a good selection that fit the prompt pretty well. Nice job!

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