ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


American Literature Videos 58 videos

American Literature 3: The Poe Must Go On (Part 1)
631 Views

What do you get when the guy who wrote “The Raven” makes a serious effort to write in verse? Poe-try… Now, when you’ve detached your eyes f...

American Literature: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
8968 Views

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, abridged. Ready? Go.

American Literature: Emily Dickinson
4357 Views

Emily Dickinson: Along with Van Gogh, proof that you’re never really famous until you’re dead.

See All

American Literature: Huckleberry Finn: Road Trip 10416 Views


Share It!


Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

Like a road trip but wetter....

00:28

A lot of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn take place on me the [River discussing Huckleberry Finn]

00:32

Mississippi River there's plenty of action along the way scoundrels, thieves

00:37

and slave hunters to dodge but what are we really doing out here besides all [Jim and Finn standing on a raft]

00:42

that well we're on what literary types like to refer to as the road trip motif

00:47

just when you thought road trips were all about spring break in the wide world [Man in a swimming pool and his trunks float away]

00:51

of storytelling the road trip serves several purposes first and foremost it's

00:56

a way of using the hero's journey archetype which stories have used since

01:00

stories first started being a you know a thing think odysseus, Star Wars, the Bible

01:06

or even Batman well the hero's journey follows a basic

01:10

formula the hero gets a call to adventure they meet up with a mentor or [Adventure calling a cell phone]

01:14

guardian encounter challenges all along the way undergo some sort of

01:19

transformation usually a spiritual one then they go back home the end clearly [Woman exits a taxi and walks towards home]

01:25

Twain made use of this classic archetype when writing Huck Finn, Hucks the hero

01:29

Jim and the civilized folks are the mentors the river journey is the action

01:34

and the Dukan King business along with the feuding families certainly caused

01:39

conflict and Huck has his crisis of conscience when he realizes that the [Huck gasps as Jim fades travels away on a raft]

01:44

right thing to do is let Jim be a free man and then they go back home nope that

01:49

part doesn't happen no one said the archetype has to stick to its formula

01:52

like chaw on your shoe.. Twain deviates from the traditional hero's journey by

01:57

letting Huck ride you know float off into the sunset instead of [Huck and Jim floating into sunset]

02:01

returning home to his hateful abusive father also Pap, his father's dead now

02:06

well that wouldn't really work anyway would it? Twain also used the road trip

02:10

slash hero's journey idea as a tool of characterization

02:13

think about it the United States is a big place and different types of

02:18

people live in different regions of the country like you know Eskimos in Alaska [Group of eskimos in Alaska]

02:23

beach bums in Florida and farmers Midwest well not only do people believe

02:28

in slightly different things or wear different clothes they speak in

02:32

different ways as well so as Huck and Jim travel downstream on [Huck and Jim travelling downstream on a raft]

02:35

the mighty Mississippi they encounter different folks with different lives and

02:38

way different ways of speaking like these choice phrases from chapter 12 and

03:01

what? come again this isn't nonsense it's what [Mississippi river discussing book]

03:07

we like to call dialect language that you'll only hear in a certain part of

03:10

the world or spoken by a specific set of people

03:13

here's another....

03:23

Well first of all only those civilized folks call

03:26

Huck by his full first name that tells us something about who's speaking here

03:30

we can also tell that's character speaking is an authority figure since [Miss Watson appears]

03:33

they're throwing down commands like nobody's business and the character has

03:36

something of an education because Twain didn't write them by using a specific

03:40

dialect what we're reading is more or less basic English dialect is a fun

03:44

little way to characterize a character's because it lets the reader know all [Person picks up Huckleberry Finn book]

03:49

sorts of traits about them without the author coming right out and saying these

03:53

things... In those delightful first passages above the characters are

03:56

lowdown murderous, thieving fools aka bad guys...Twain writes this dialogue in a

04:02

dialect that shows they're uneducated and in this case they're clearly up to

04:06

no good but just because these fools were foolish it doesn't mean that they [Image of man pointing a gun at a man on the floor]

04:11

didn't also have some wise things to say being uneducated doesn't necessarily

04:16

equate to being unwise and in the second example miss Watson is ordering Huck

04:20

around using his full name to show that she means business..Here's a

04:24

third example, this is the way Twain wrote Jim's dialect...

04:48

....now when we know Jim's a slave

04:50

which means he's not been allowed the chance to have any education..The other

04:53

really important thing to note about the way Twain wrote the very dialect is that [Dialect floating in river]

04:57

besides being a super effective tool of characterization it's also how he's

05:02

created a voice for the books narrator Huck himself...

05:05

Huck's a kid and he's been through some tough stuff in life these are factors

05:10

which shape how he sees the world around him and how he tells the tale of his

05:14

experiences were an older more civilized narrator the telling this story it would

05:19

have to be written in a totally different way probably like how much [Miss Watson appears as Huck is sitting at a table with a bowl of food]

05:22

Watson speaks we lose a lot of the characterization as it stands now so

05:26

it's a good thing Twain opted to write this story in the way that he did even

05:29

though Twain differentiates the characters through dialect his

05:32

underlying commentary and a major theme in this book is that people are alike [Girl flicking through a book]

05:37

everywhere we made different thoughts morals, molars and the way we speak

05:42

everyone lets their own preconceptions color their approach to the world the [Girl wearing 3D glasses in a movie theater]

05:47

road trip or river trip more accurately here

05:50

let's Twain show us that people are alike all over they never look past

05:54

their front yard as the king so eloquently says...

06:06

What he means is that fools are everywhere no [Man sits down on a train and a clown appears]

06:08

matter where you go..they're they are... well above all the road trip story

06:12

is very American it takes a hero's journey but puts a

06:15

very red white and blue spin on it America is a big country lots of roads [Cars travelling down a highway]

06:19

lots of rivers lots of things to see we spent most of the 19th century

06:24

stampeding madly towards California in what's known as a national road trip

06:29

that took up a huge chunk of our history it's no wonder that Twain used it as a

06:34

blueprint to talk about American life and values you know for

06:37

better or worse tons of other writers have done the same in fact you can

06:41

probably find a road trip story to fit every mood

06:44

Steinbeck did it with The Grapes of Wrath and travels with Charlie... Kerouac [Road trip book examples appear]

06:48

did it with on the road you can even go with Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas or

06:53

the electric kool-aid acid test if drug abuse by proxy is your thing all of them

06:58

took at least some of their cues and inspiration from Huck Finn not just

07:01

because it's a seriously great story but because here on the Mississippi we do [Mississippi river transforms into a hypnotic trance]

07:06

trippin' in the right way

Related Videos

Catching Fire (Part 2)
6719 Views

“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
47687 Views

Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.

Edgar Allan Poe: The Twilight Connection
3322 Views

Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?

El Gran Gatsby
866 Views

¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...

Fahrenheit 451
84302 Views

Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...