Episode 1: (Chapters 1- 4) Huck is living with the Widow
Douglas, who is teaching him about region and having go to school. Tom
Sawyer starts a gang who says there are gonna steal for passing wagons.
Tom plays a trick on Jim. Huck is in Tom's gang for a little while but
nothing really comes of it and he quits. Huck realizes his dad is back
and gives all the money to Judge Thatcher. This episode ends with huck's
dad in his room. Huck goes to Jim for advice or a prophet and Jim
really doesn't tell him anything important. ends by Pa showing up.
Episode
2: (5- 7) Pa gives Huck a hard time for being eduated and tells him to
stop going to school or he'll whip him. Then he questions Huck about the
money and Huck says he doesn't have it. Pa says he will get it from
Judge Tatcher cause it's his. Then he goes to the Judge and demands for
the money. The judge decided he wanted custody of Huck and go to the
law. Well there is a new Judge in town who doesn't want to break up a
son and dad. Pa then plays off the judge's Gullibilty, saying he would
quit drink and is a changed man. The judge gives him a room and new
clothes, pa gets drunk and the judge gives up on him. So Pa tries to get
the money again, and he also kidnaps Huck. Well they live in a cabin
and Pa is careful not to leave anything Huck could use to escape. Huck
eventually finds a saw and starts sawing through the floor everytime Pa
leaves. One night Pa comes back really drunk and tries to kill Huck. The
next day, Huck finds some logs and Pa takes them to the town to sell
them. While Pa is way, Huck finishes sawing thorugh, makes it look like
he was killed and leaves.
Episode 3: (8-11)
Episode 4: (12-16)
Here is the reading schedule for this week and for break:
12/17 chapters 8-9
12/18 chapter 10
12/19 FINAL
12/20 No class
12/21 No class
Break
12/26 chapters 11=12
12/27 chapters 13-14
12/28 chapters 15-16
1/2 chapters 17-18
1/3 chapters 19-20
1/4 Don Hather
Study Questions
1.
Compare and contrast the lies Huck gives to Mrs. Judith Lotus to the
lies he tells the watchman? (chap 11 and 13). Think about purpose and
results. Remember lies and inventing (or reinventing) personas is a
motif. What theme do you think these lies reinforce?
2. Make a list of names Huck uses or invent.
3.
Contrast the gang on the Walter Scott to Tom’s Gang (you might even
look at some of the rules of Tom’s Gang). What is the significance of
these two gangs? What idea is Twain trying to reinforce?
4. Look up
Walter Scott on the internet. Why would Twain name the sinking boat
Walter Scott? What is he making fun of? (Hint: Research the name and
read about who Walter Scott was).
5. Look up the dimensions of the
Mississippi. Write them down. Look up the Mississippi in Illinois and
Missouri. What does the internet say about the river in these two
states? Find a picture of the Mississippi. Why do you think Twain used
the Mississippi as a symbol?
6. What are Huck’s descriptions of the
river when he and Jim first leave Jackson Island (before the storm)?
What theme does this reinforce?
7. Why does Huck want to save the gang of murders? What is funny about this? What does it say about Huck?
8.
What is the significance of the following quote: “Do you reckon Tom
Sawyer would ever go by this thing? Not for pie, he wouldn’t. He’d
call it an adventure—that’s what he’d call it; and he’d land on that
wreck if it was his last act. And wouldn’t he throw style into
it?—wouldn’t he spread himself, nor nothing? Why you’d think it was
Christopher Columbus discovering Kingdom-Come.”
9. What is funny about the discussion between borrowing and stealing? Discuss what you think the significance of this is.
10. Make a list of references to death so far in the novel.
11. List the allusions so far.
What was your favorite event that happened in chapters 11-13? Why?
Huck Discussion Questions: XV - XX
1. Discuss the
significance of the fog incident and Jim's interpretation of it. "The
lot of towheads was troubles we was going to get into with quarrelsome
people and all kinds of mean folks, but if we minded our business and
didn't talk back and aggravate them, we would pull through and get out
of the fog and into the big clear river, which was the free states, and
wouldn't have no more trouble" (64). Consider the major themes as well
as foreshadowing.
2. How does Huck feel about playing the trick
on Jim? Comment: "It was fifteen minutes before I could work myself up
and humble myself to a nigger; but I done it, and I warn't sorry for it
afterwards, neither" (65). How does this statement contribute to the
overall meaning of the novel?
3. Discuss the significance of the following quotes from Chapter XVI:
"Jim
said it made him all over trembly and feverish to be so close to
freedom. Well, it made me all trembly and feverish, too, to hear him
because I begun to get it through my head that he was most free -- and
who was to blame for it? Why me. I couldn't get it out of my conscience,
no how nor no way." (66).
"Here was this nigger which I as good
as helped to run away, coming right out flat-footed and saying he would
steal his children -- children that belonged to a man I didn't even
know; a man that hadn't ever done me no harm." (67). Explain the irony
in this quote as well as the significance.
"Well, then, says I,
what's the use you learning to do right, when it's troublesome to do
right and ain't no trouble to do wrong, and the wages is just the same?"
(69).
"Doan' less' talk about it, Huck. Po' niggers can't have
no luck. I awluz 'spected dat rattle-snake skin warn't done wid its
work." (70).
4. Why do the bounty hunters give Huck money? What is ironic about their reaction to Huck's story?
5. What does the destruction of the "naturally" created raft by the "industrially" created steamboat symbolize?
6. Speculate on why Twain put Huckleberry Finn aside for a few years at the end of XVI?
7.
Describe the Grangerford house. What is satirical about the
furnishings, art, and poetry? What does this description say about the
Grangerfords?
8. The first part of Chapter XVII reveals an
example of the theme of Huck playing on Buck's gullibility. Discuss this
example as well as other examples of the novel's major themes evident
in
Chapters XVI & XVII.
9. What does Huck's reaction to "Moses and the candle" indicate? Discuss the meaning of "Moses" as a motif in the novel.
10. What does Twain satirize in his description of the church service and the hogs that sleep under the floor?
11.
What does the feud symbolize? Does this remind you of another famous
piece of literature? Explain. Through the feud incident, Twain satirizes
human traits and behaviors. Discuss.
12. "I was powerful glad
to get away from the feuds, and so was Jim to get away from the swamp.
We said there warn't no home like a raft, after all. Other places do
seem so clamped up and smothery, but a raft don't. You feel mighty free
and easy and comfortable on a raft"(88). Discuss the paradox.
Furthermore, this excerpt from the final paragraph of Chapter XVIII is
significant in that it pertains to the major themes of the novel.
Explain.
13. Huck and Jim's manner of dress on the raft is symbolic. What do clothes represent?
14. Why doesn't Huck expose the Duke and the King (Dauphin) as frauds?
15. Who is the most shrewd, the King and the Duke or Huck? Why? Give some examples.
16. What does Twain satirize in the plan to present Romeo and Juliet? Discuss Romeo and Juliet as a motif.
17. Discuss the significance of the pirate and the revival meeting. What is Twain satirizing?
18. Is Twain making a statement about society through the antics of the King and Duke? Explain.
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