In Mark Twain’s novel “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” he talks about small town life in Southern Mississippi. He portrays it as gossipy, a place where everyone knows everyone and knows everyone else’s business and doesn’t care to tell it. It is confining to Huck and Jim because there is too much conforming to society. This is why they escape on the raft.
In Chapter 18 when Huck goes into town dressed as a girl to get information he talks to a woman who has only lived there two weeks. She is able to tell him everything that is going on despite this. This shows how in small towns people aren’t afraid to talk.
Not only did the woman freely give all the information to someone she didn’t know, someone had to tell her all about it in a two week tome span. Twain is depicting small towns in a gossipy manner, where no one has discretion. Twain is also characterizing small towns as confining with a lot of conformation to society. When Huck goes to live with the Widow Douglas and Miss Watson, they try to turn him into someone he’s not.
They dress him up in fancy clothes, try to teach him religion and try to take away all of his individuality. They do this because this is what the society in their small town accepts, and they don’t want him to be different than anyone else, because how would that make them look. Huck however, escapes their attempts to “sivilize” him by running away. Twain shows that he has some contempt for small town life and it’s behaviors. Miss Watson is one of the main people to show this because of her trying to change Huck. Twain attempts to demonstrate this by portraying small town life and gossipy and confining. His dislike is seen especially through Huck who escapes the conformity to live his own life.