This is the start of it
Huckleberry Finn is a novel obsessed with race, however, it is also a novel obsessed with the absence of race. Huck and Jim find happiness only on Jackson’s Island, the site of their first meeting, where the two manage to briefly transcend race altogether. Because of their unusual circumstances, Huck and Jim momentarily turn their white boy/black slave identities upside down, an achievement Twain portrays as deeply desirable.
Huck and Jim are uniquely suited to the blurring of race and identity that occurs on Jackson’s Island. Both are intelligent, despite their lack of formal education; both question conventional wisdom and view events from a skewed angle; and both are good at heart and tend to empathize with people, including those who are unlike themselves. In addition, both are outsiders in society. As a slave, Jim is viewed as less than human by whites. While Huck is infinitely more privileged because of his whiteness, he is nonetheless an outlier due to his poverty, his drunken, violent father, and his frequent homelessness. Because of their smarts, their inquisitiveness, their compassion, and their mutual alienation from society, Huck and Jim are far less likely than other characters in the novel to view race as a rigid mold into which people are poured at birth.
A tragedy in the original sense is a play where we have a great and noble character whose downfall occurs due to a mistake that is a part of the character and this is where the tragedy occurs. It is about great men who who have a problem which leads to their death ultimately as opposed to comedies where a resolution of the problem happens in the end in a comic way, but the characters are usually commoners or highly immoral people.
A problem play is a play in which a common social issue is being examined through different character who represent different values and conflicting views on life. It became common in the 19th century due to Henrik Ibsen, but many critics noted that Shakespeare who wrote long before that time had many aspects of problem plays in his works.
The characteristics of Hamlet that are a part of a tragedy is the fact that he is a noble young man from a great family who wants to solve the problem presented which is the death of his father and bring things to justice. He however has a tragic flaw that leads to his downfall. The part of Hamlet that can be seen as a problem play is that all characters have different perceptions of what is happening and what needs to happen and when and these conflicting opinions ultimately lead to a tragic ending.
You could say that you believe it is more in the realm of tragedy than that of a problem play because it is structured more as a tragedy of old times because of the way that Hamlet is represented and the way he behaves and ultimately the way it ends which is designed to provide catharsis to the viewers.
Attitudes are some times good and sometimes bad depends on the day your having
<span>B. Lonely, Elisa is dissatisfied with being cut off from the outside world.</span>
Answer:
I think it's C it just makes the most sence so sorry if I'm wrong