Continuing Huck Cognitive Dissonance, Morality, and Huck’s Decision.
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Transcript of Continuing Huck Cognitive Dissonance, Morality, and Huck’s Decision.
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Continuing HuckCognitive Dissonance, Morality, and
Huck’s Decision
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Cognitive DissonanceO Twain uses Huck as a master satiric
voice; but he also uses the idea of cognitive dissonance
O Definition: The feeling of discomfort accompanied by holding two contradictory ideas at once
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Freewrite
ONobody wants to be in an abusive relationship. But people continue to be in them. This is a form of cognitive dissonance. How do people deal with this?
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CD ExamplesO DietingO Relationships
O Unemployed boyfriendO Unstable/abusive boyfriend
O Office supplies from workO Premarital sex
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Cognitive Dissonance and Racism
O If you accept that “other” people are human persons, then you’re essentially arguing for their equality
O But this means you can’t treat them as less than human – but people did, and people do
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Dealing with racist cognitive dissonance
O How do people deal with this?O Option one: Convince yourself that your
ideas and actions aren’t actually treating them as unequalO Segregation
O Option two: Convince yourself, consciously or unconsciously, that you are indeed somehow better than people of a specific raceO “They’re human too, but more prone to
theft, etc.”
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Huck’s Racism?O What about Huck? Does he recognize Jim’s
humanity? O Yes! (Read end of chapter 23)
O Is Huck racist? Does he disagree with slavery?O Yes and no! (read the book)
O So he is involved in cognitive dissonance:O On the one hand, he recognizes Jim’s
humanityO But on the other hand, he is OK with slavery
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Climax of Cognitive Dissonance in Huck
O Psychologically speaking, you can’t be involved in cognitive dissonance for too long – you either “correct” the problem, or go crazy
O Where do we see this cognitive dissonance (this feeling of discomfort) coming to a climax? (Hint: In some ways, it’s also the climax of the novel.)
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Why the Dissonance? Society
O On the one hand, Huck has society’s morals, and everything they have taught him: slavery is OK; helping a slave is wrong; you go to hell for doing bad things
O But on the other hand, we see that Huck, even if unconsciously, wants to help Jim because he is a person and friend
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Huck’s Decision
OHe resolves this by rejecting society’s morals: ripping up the letter, saying he’d go to hell, etc.
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Twain’s Points O So what is Twain saying to his times?O You can’t recognize others’ humanity
while involving yourself in racist practices
O You can step outside of your society’s morality and recognize morals more important