Topic: Mark Twain
Proposal: The hypocrisy of society’s beliefs on religion and race through satire in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
In this research proposal, I want to explore how Mark Twain uses his satire to get a point across in his books “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Satire is generally used to depict the problems in society without actually saying “This is the problem with society,” and this seems prominent in the first book with Tom Sawyer as the protagonist. It appears to be a book solely about the adventures of a boy, but, underlying the fun and the quests is Mark Twain voicing that not all of Tom’s ways of thinking are correct. However, it isn’t easy to see Tom Sawyer as a privileged white boy who has fun at everyone else’s expense, because Tom’s audience has fallen so in love with him. Mark Twain switches his protagonist in the sequel, and, as Olivier Nyirubugara says when he explored the themes of the two novels, he “needed a profane, less cultured, uneducated, powerless, natural and honest twelve-year-old boy” to objectively observe and criticize society (Nyirubugara 1.1). Gary Scharnhorst also explored the different topics Mark Twain criticized, and declared racism, imperialism, and especially religion as his favorite subjects to discuss society’s hypocrisy with. However, the way Twain does this between his two novels shifts, he approaches the two novels through two conflicting eyes – the first boy vivaciously adhering to the rules he finds in romance novels and superstitions, and the second boy much more free from society’s “wisdom,” and capable of learning truth, even if it goes around what his culture has deemed acceptable, moral, or correct. By harnessing his comedic criticism in these two different ways on the topics of race and religion, and placing today’s unacceptable behaviors in acceptable context, Twain is able to suggest that society turns a blind eye to its own problems but is ready and willing to condemn other’s.
Preliminary Bibliography:
Depalma, Anthony. "A Scholar Finds Huck Finn's Voice in Twain's Writing About a Black Youth."The New York Times. The New York Times, 07 July 1992. Web. 14 Jan. 2014
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