Now we are at the end of the book
and can now confirm that Huck wants nothing to do with his society. He says
that if he has to use a pickaxe to free Jim, to take a watermelon, or to take a
Sunday-school book he will, no matter what anyone thinks. He basically declares
that he will do what he wants and will use whatever method necessary to get
what he wants and doesn't care about what anyone else has to say. We also see
at the very end of the book, he says he wants to head west because Aunt Sally
is trying to civilize him. He says he is tired of that. Huck wants nothing to
do with his society and doesn't care about his social responsibilities.
However, I think that Huck can never fully escape from his society. His
societies beliefs and morals are all he knows. It is hard to break away from
that. He still sees Jim as inferior but at least as a person. He grows from the
beginning to the end but it will be hard for him to completely escape from the
southern mentality. The end shows that he is willing to try because he wants to
move to the west, which has different beliefs than the south.
I never talked about Jim’s social
responsibility. We can see how much Jim has to worry about. He was going to get
hanged just for being around an injured white child. They had no proof or
evidence he caused it, yet still blamed him. Jim is not allowed whatsoever to
do anything against the whites. Even when Tom tells him to do ridiculous things
that he knows are unnecessary, he still listens.