![]() ![]() Throughout the book, Huck Finn interacts with these family units and either takes on the role of a family member, especially with Jim, the Duke, and the King, and the Phelpses, or he observes the family from the perspective of an outsider, as with the Grangerfords. However, other groups, such as Huck, Jim, the Duke, and the King, are not actually related by blood, but nevertheless exhibit family-like roles and actions. Some of these, such as the Phelpses, are traditional family units and they function as families quite clearly. Among the many circles of people in the novel, the major groups that function as “families” are Huck and Jim Huck, Jim, the Duke, and the King Huck and Pap Huck, the Widow Douglas, and Miss Watson the Grangerfords and the Phelpses. ![]() ![]() In Twain’s work, the “family” refers not only to traditional family units but also to any group of individuals who live in proximity to one another and interact with each other in a way that mimics the workings of an actual family. ![]()
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