Huckleberry Finn Reading Schedule, Literary Terms, and Reading Questions Important Literary Terms – Reading Schedule – Read the whole chapter! Conflict – Person vs. Person, Society, Self Irony, Humor and Satire Regionalism and Dialect Bildungs Roman Essential Questions – What does a person do if his or her moral code (sense of right and wrong) contradicts society’s moral code? Does a person follow one’s own morals no matter the consequences? What is Twain’s message about America, slavery, and morality? How does he develop this message through the relationship between Huck and Jim and through Huck’s moral choices throughout the novel? Objectives – Understand how Mark Twain uses the bildungs roman form to show both Huck’s and America’s coming of age. Analyze how Twain uses humor and satire to emphasize America’s moral shortcomings. Infer how the historical context of the Civil War and Reconstruction periods influences the themes of Huckleberry Finn. Infer how the characteristics of Realism and Regionalism influence the style and themes. Chapters 1-7 1. Describe the appearance, actions, personality, and moral character of each of the following characters: Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, Jim, Miss Watson, and Widow Douglas. 2. What is the difference between Huck and Tom? Between Miss Watson and Widow Douglas? Why doesn’t Huck get along with Miss Watson and Widow Douglas? 3. What does Huck think about religion – specifically the good place, the bad place, and prayer? 4. Give at least two examples of superstition in this section of the novel. 5. How does the physical description of Huck’s father in Chapter 5 also serve to describe his character? 6. What does Huck’s father criticize about the “govment”? What does Twain want the reader to feel about these issues? Chapters 8-11 7. Do you think that Jim’s character is any different in chapters 8 and 9 than in chapter 2? If so, in what ways? 8. How would you characterize Mrs. Loftus? Why do you think she isn’t harsher on Huck when she discovers he is lying to her? 9. What does Huck’s insistence on boarding the wrecked steamboat tell us about Huck? 10. Why does Huck stop and try to save murderers, and how does this reflect on his character? 11. Why do you think Jim is so vehement in his dislike of King Solomon? What does Jim’s stand satirize about a slave society? Mon 4/24 Intro Tues 4/25 Chap 1-3 Wed 4/26 Chap. 4-7 (16 pgs) due Thur 4/27 Quiz + Reading Day Fri 4/28 Chap. 8-11 (19 pgs) due Skip Chap. 12-14 Chap. 15-16 (12 pages) Skip Chap. 17-30 Mon 5/1 Chap. 31-33 (20 pgs) due Skip Chap. 34-39 Tues 5/2 Reading Day Wed 5/3 Chap. 40-The Last (17 pgs) due Thur 5/4 Faces of Pap/Journal Mon 5/8 Unit Test Chapters 15-16 12. What trick does Huck play on Jim? 13. Does the reader’s attitude toward Jim change as a result of his responses to Huck’s trick on him? What does his response make you think of Huck’s pranks? 14. What is Huck’s response to Jim’s plan to steal his children after he reaches freedom? How does this response help to satirize a slave society? 15. Why doesn’t Huck turn in Jim? 16. What is the principle conflict in Huck’s mind about Jim? 17. With Huck and Jim below Cairo and the raft destroyed, where do you think the plot can go from here? Chapters 31-33 18. Why is it important that Huck says, “All right, then, I’ll go to hell”? 19. Why does Huck assume Tom Sawyer’s identity? 20. What happens when Tom appears on the scene? 21. What is the difference between Tom’s plan for freeing Jim and Huck’s plan? 22. How does Huck change when Tom comes? Chapters 40-The Last 23. Tom’s plan is actually cruel. Why? 24. What more do we learn about Tom in these chapters? 25. How does Huck appear to be superior to Tom? 26. What happens to Jim? Huck? Tom? 27. What is left undecided at the end of the novel?
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