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Mark Twain's purpose of writing the novel Huckleberry Finn was to inform his audience the flaws and problems he saw in society by using Satire (rhetorical device). The beauty of using satire was that it was humorous with a serious message, subtle yet powerful. The novel was both a work of humor and serious social commentary. Twain uses generous amounts of satire of man's cruelty to man, of religious hypocrisy, of Romanticism, and of superstition in Huck Finn both to amuse the reader and, more importantly, to make the reader aware of the social "ills" which Twain saw at the time.

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13y ago

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