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Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Comparing Metamorphoses in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Color Purple

The Characters Metamorphoses in Ad gages of Huckleberry Finn, Color Purple, and Catcher in the The main characters of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Color Purple, and The Catcher in the Rye begin their stories as lonely, confined, and bloodsucking people battling with their own thoughts versus societal pressures. The three long to be independent and free, but lack the means and the confidence to find themselves. Huck, Celie, and Holden ultimately venture on life-altering journeys to attain their individuality and to discover their worth as homosexual beings. Huckleberry Finn has tremendous difficulty transitioning from an easily find outd per intelligence to an independent one. He begins as one of many faithful followers to Tom Sawyer, willing to scuff behind him into any dangerous situations because Tom seems more self-confident than he ever allows himself to be. Everybody was willing (Twain 9) to Toms declaration, well start this band of robbers and call it Tom Sawye rs gang (Twain 9) where their business is Nothing only sic robbery and murder (Twain 10). Tom is so self-assured that Huck, lacking confidence in himself to make his own decisions without leadership or outside assistance, is restricted from locating his level of confidence plot of ground around his dictatorial best friend. Another dominant source of influence in Hucks life is his father, whose relationship with his son is comparable to that of a sea captain to a slave. Pap tries to cheat Huck out of his money, claiming all the care and all the anxiety and all the expense of raising Huck (Twain 26), so he can go into a drunken stupor and not be concerned about reality. To vent his anger for failed attempts, he punishes his own son through kidnapping, imprison... ...Through beautiful depictions of their characters metamorphoses, the authors present the feeling that embracing exertion to define individuality and become independent is something everyone needs to do. The authors e ssentially bump through their writing that without opinions, ideas, and liberations of their own, people have nothing else to look ship to in life. Huck, Celie, and Holden, who are each representatives of the diverse American culture, must each to look ahead to uncover their full potential as military man beings rather than participate in social order. Works CitedSalinger, J. D. The Catcher in the Rye. Boston, MA Little, Brown, and Company, May 1991. Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. in the buff York, NY Bantam Books, March 1981. Walker, Alice. The Color Purple. New York, NY Pocket Books/Washington Square Press, June 1983.

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