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How Is Huck Portrayed As A Foil To Huckleberry Finn?

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The length of Huck stay with the Grangerfords in chapter 17 and 18 is meant to satirize romantic literature that was popular at the time the book was written. The GrangerFord's home seem like a palace to Huck when in reality the family was a bit ridiculous. Twain used the feuding families to poke fun at the romantic, victorian notions of family honor. Emmeline, her poetry, and her obsession with death serve to satirize romantic literature penchant for overzealous morning and fondness for the macabre.

The main way that Buck is portrayed as a foil to Huck is their upbringings. Huck was raised in a poor home with an alcoholic and abusive father, yet Buck was raised in a wealthy family and should be well-educated, but both families have been swept into a feud that has taken over all of their lives. This proves that upbringing and class is not everything, as Huck and Buck have the same amount of Education. …show more content…
Even though it focuses on the two families, the story is tied back to the main story of the reuniting Huck and Jim. Thus creating a frame

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