Few other books have captured the spirit of an archetypal American journey as Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Can we imagine that it is not just a story through space on the Mississippi River sometime between 1835-1845 but is also ongoing through time--that the trip Huck and Jim took in the ante-bellum south when slavery was still legal is as relevant in the American psyche today? That the tale of the journey on the river is ongoing in the American psyche has been made abundantly clear by the acclaim that Percival Everett’s 2024 book, James, has received. In Everett’s book, Jim has become James and recounts the story of his journey with Huck Finn down the Mississippi river, giving James more agency, intelligence, and a voice to critique racism and explore the themes of freedom and family.
Listen to Huck Finn, Jim/James, and Mark Twain speak to us with contemporary voices that are as poignant as when the book was first published in 1885.
This video is an AI-generated active imagination of what might be said to us today based on the written historical record.
A Huck Finn Barbaric Yawp to Trumpian America
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Well now, I ain’t much for speeches.
I never did trust folks that stand up straight and talk too long about what’s good for you. Most times they’re just tellin’ you what’s good for them.
I been listenin’ to all this hollerin’ — folks shoutin’ about freedom and flags and who belongs and who don’t — and it sounds powerful grand, I reckon. Powerful loud, anyway.
But it don’t feel right.
When I was driftin’ the river with Jim, there was a heap of people said they knew what was right. Said they had it written down. Said the law was clear as day.
Law said Jim was property.
Heart said he was my friend.
Now I ain’t educated enough to argue with laws and such, but I know what it feels like to see a man treated like he ain’t a man.
And I know when folks start talkin’ about other folks like they’re less — or dangerous just for bein’ who they are — that river water starts lookin’ cleaner than dry land.
Seems to me there’s a lot of folks nowadays talkin’ big about strength.
But strength ain’t bullyin’.
Strength ain’t laughin’ at someone tied up and hollerin’ that they ought to like it.
Strength is paddlin’ against the current when everybody’s floatin’ the easy way.
I reckon what scares me most ain’t the loud men.
It’s the quiet ones that nod along.
Back then I decided I’d go to hell before I’d turn Jim in.
Didn’t feel brave. Felt sick. Felt scared.
But sometimes doin’ right feels like losin’ your place in the world.
Maybe that’s the trouble now. Folks don’t want to lose their place. Don’t want to lose their side.
But if your side means somebody else don’t get to be human — well, that ain’t much of a side.
I ain’t sayin’ I got answers.
I’m just sayin’ if you listen real quiet — underneath all the shovin’ and shoutin’ — you might hear that little voice that don’t talk fancy.
The one that just says:
That’s a person.
And if you can’t hear that anymore…
Well then the river’s risin’.