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American Literature: What The Huck Is He Saying? 105 Views
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Description:
Mark Twain could have just written Huckleberry Finn in his own voice. But... that would have sounded weird. Instead, he used literary devices such as syntax, characterization, vernacular, dialect, and colloquialism to make his characters sound like real, fully fleshed out people, drawing his readers deeper into the story. Which is exactly what happened with Jumanji. No thank you.
Transcript
- 00:01
No what the hawk is he saying Maxine jags eleven
- 00:09
one vernacular burn number burn tiling y'all dialing a couple
- 00:22
All right well have you ever noticed that books don't
- 00:24
always use english in the way your language arts teacher
- 00:27
would prefer You know they don't always use complete sentences
Full Transcript
- 00:30
correct grammar or even spell things right Especially when they
- 00:34
speak in the voice of that character What we have
- 00:37
here is a classic case of first person narrative talking
- 00:40
in the voice of the character to give you a
- 00:41
sense of the guy or girl or siegel or stuffed
- 00:44
animal or rocking horse telling the story Sometimes doing cell
- 00:48
means breaking the rules of proper writing and rule breaking
- 00:51
can be fun when done in the right way Syntax
- 00:54
basically it's the way sentences air put together so that
- 00:57
words makes sense It's the anti word salad A set
- 01:00
of very boring rules you probably learned in english class
- 01:03
to figure out how to assemble it sends the right
- 01:05
way Get off those rules aaron place fly breakem why
- 01:08
would any writer deliberately go against the rules that your
- 01:11
english teacher is busy pounding into your head One big
- 01:15
word characterization Well you've probably noticed how A number of
- 01:18
characters don't talk the way that others do You know
- 01:21
this guy is a big one so's this guy and
- 01:24
this guy Well characters break the rules of syntax all
- 01:28
the time and yet we still understand what they're saying
- 01:31
Well syntax can usually be examined using one of two
- 01:34
specific techniques word order and sentence length Word order means
- 01:39
changing the placement of wards in a given sentence saying
- 01:43
trying too hard you are instead of you are trying
- 01:47
too hard for example the greatest practitioner of this technique
- 01:50
esses yoda But it goes way beyond little green guys
- 01:54
inside five films But if you applied correctly then the
- 01:56
grammatical mangling doesn't matter you still underst and what said
- 02:01
and the mangling actually becomes a delightful character affectation pro
- 02:05
tip you've got to know the rules of grammar before
- 02:08
you break him The other key aspect of syntax comes
- 02:10
from sentence length Well some people use short sentences when
- 02:14
they speak Check out hawk slinging short sentences my nose
- 02:18
began to each it it's still the tears come into
- 02:20
my eyes but i dass and scratch then it begun
- 02:23
itch on the inside Next i got tow hitch and
- 02:26
underneath puck spitting out about five words of sentence here
- 02:29
which you might expect from a thirteen year old kid
- 02:31
without much education Now my sentence length on the other
- 02:34
hand Well just starting to stop take a look Well
- 02:36
one night i creeps to dido posted late into dull
- 02:40
won't quite shit in a hero mrs tail the widder
- 02:44
she gonna sell me down to orleans but she didn't
- 02:47
want to but she could get eight hundred dollars for
- 02:50
me and it is such a big stack of money
- 02:52
she couldn't resist I know we've got a lot of
- 02:54
misspelling in there too We'll get to that for now
- 02:56
Look at the differences between the way i talk and
- 02:59
the way huck does well the length of the senses
- 03:01
becomes a way of showing who we are and how
- 03:04
we talk letting you know who's talking even if you
- 03:07
aren't directly told which is why syntax is so important
- 03:10
beyond sounding like jet i masters and resolutely refusing to
- 03:14
use a period syntax shows us who the speaker is
- 03:18
and what part of the world they call home We
- 03:20
also know this as vernacular why use vernacular well for
- 03:24
starters it's a quick and easy way to show us
- 03:27
where a character is from someone who says he all
- 03:31
probably from the south for example while someone who says
- 03:34
by jove is likely from great britain and pretty annoying
- 03:38
syntax and sentence structure worked the same way which is
- 03:41
why twain sticks to the vernacular and huck finn huck's
- 03:44
also a kid which means he doesn't know a lot
- 03:47
of the five dollar words that tween did Look at
- 03:49
the first line of the book you don't know about
- 03:51
me without you have read a book by the name
- 03:54
of the adventures of tom sawyer but that ain't no
- 03:57
matter Ouch Seriously bad grammar there If you turned in
- 03:59
a paper with grammar that bad well the failing grades
- 04:02
would fall like rain And obviously smart guy like mark
- 04:05
twain knew how to construct a sentence but he wrote
- 04:08
this way because well it's how hot would talk talk
- 04:11
wouldn't use big words So why should twain So yeah
- 04:14
vernacular creates character at least helps twain can tell us
- 04:18
that huck's a kid he comes from a certain place
- 04:21
and even that he's kind of racist Through his use
- 04:24
of slurs Well there's another rule in writing called show
- 04:28
Don't tell the wren acura louse tween to show us
- 04:31
all these things about hawk without having accountant just say
- 04:34
he's a bigot from missouri with a fourth grade education
- 04:38
Which brings us to another important part of vernacular use
- 04:41
of dialect Well dialect is a particular way of speaking
- 04:44
from a particular part of the world Why californians say
- 04:48
whoa dude texan say howdy and people from the midwest
- 04:53
say yeah that's right don'tyou know anyway dialect can become
- 04:56
very detailed when you write specific characters In extreme cases
- 05:00
you can identify one tiny little corner of territory based
- 05:03
solely on where a character from that region maybe speaking
- 05:06
believe it or not twain was going extreme on this
- 05:08
one twin developed specific dialects for his character's Huck for
- 05:12
example uses pike county dialect which is a county on
- 05:15
the mississippi river between the cities of st louis and
- 05:18
animal btw pike county is reald despite huck's hometown of
- 05:22
st petersburg being totally made up If you read the
- 05:25
book you'll notice that i speak in a much different
- 05:28
dialect than huck does I was an escaped slave and
- 05:32
the dialogue between used for me was called slave speak
- 05:36
It stemmed from a lack of education and was part
- 05:38
of twins Efforts to call out slavery is completely awful
- 05:42
things as you can see have upped my game Most
- 05:44
interesting bits of dialect in the book come from the
- 05:47
duke and the king the con artist we get up
- 05:50
on the raft they use a very formal dialect with
- 05:53
a lot of complicated words However it's also clear they
- 05:56
don't always understand the meaning of those words They're trying
- 05:59
to convince everyone that their sophisticated when in fact they've
- 06:01
just couple of buffoons again with show don't tell idea
- 06:06
We know these two are deceitful and try to look
- 06:08
fancier than they are without having to be told we
- 06:11
have to listen to the way they talk well Part
- 06:13
of making dialect sound comes from using colloquialisms which are
- 06:18
specific phrases that are well overly familiar For example cap
- 06:21
got too handy with his hickory is a colloquial way
- 06:25
of saying my father beat me silly Using colloquialisms is
- 06:28
a clever tool for keeping the dialect simple sounding like
- 06:32
the characters would sound in real life While still keeping
- 06:35
the dialogue interesting if pucks started every sentence with i
- 06:38
don't expect or kindly lend me your wired era reader
- 06:43
well you probably be throwing the book at the wall
- 06:45
by the end of the first chapter But by varying
- 06:48
the dialogue with colloquial terms twin khun do a number
- 06:51
of nifty things one show readers how people talk in
- 06:54
a given location to make the dialogue more interesting to
- 06:58
read by mixing it up Three give the characters a
- 07:01
distinctive personality when they speak Books like huck finn have
- 07:05
a lot going for them which is why the language
- 07:07
arts students get to read them instead of say twilight
- 07:10
The way tween skillfully uses syntax is a tool of
- 07:13
characterization is one reason this book is still being taught
- 07:16
today not only to show us how the characters think
- 07:19
and act but to give us a good idea of
- 07:21
where they come from and to show us something about
- 07:23
life in that place and time It's pretty slick if
- 07:27
you can pull it off and it's just one of
- 07:28
the little tricks tween used to make huckleberry finn all
- 07:32
kinds of awesome Now if you'll excuse me i've got
- 07:34
to bone up on my french colloquialisms while huck and
- 07:37
i might just be planning another trip here in a 00:07:40.549 --> [endTime] few
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