Encyclopedia of Themes in Literature

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

The consequence of his decision marks his transi-
tion from childhood to adulthood. Prior to the
novel’s climax, Huck has been witness to the darker
side of the adult world—from his father’s racist
diatribe about the voting rights of recently freed
slaves to a long and bloody family feud to the con
artistry of the Duke and Dauphin. Unbeknownst
to Huck—but abundantly clear to the novel’s read-
ers—is the influence that these events have on his
decision to attempt to free Jim—the first adult
decision of his life. Because of his experiences and
this decision, Huck realizes that he may be outcast
from his society, as he has deviated from its expected
adult norms, and he will no longer be able to go
back to live his previous lifestyle of barefooted, pipe-
smoking truancy.
This deviation from expected norms highlights
another feature of the coming-of-age narrative:
the realization of social expectations and norms.
To once again use the Huck Finn example, Huck
fully realizes the implications of his decision: He
considers himself damned and acknowledges that
he will be unable to fully participate in the adult
world because of this violation. As such, he is able to
recognize the social, adult world now laid out before
him. While this realization further distances Huck
from his childhood innocence, it also presents him
with a choice: Either accept this adult world and
conform to its norms and standards or decide on
self-exile. Huckleberry Finn, of course, chooses the
latter, as he decides to light out for the territories of
the American West rather than conform to the rigid
social obligations demanded by pre–Civil War rural
Missouri.
Huck’s choice to light out for the territories
highlights a third feature of the coming-of-age
narrative. His decision to leave is rooted in another
choice: to accept a socially constructed identity, or
to construct a personal sense of identity for oneself.
While this idea is one of the oldest and most com-
mon themes of literature, when examined through
the lens of a coming-of-age narrative, it takes on
additional weight.
Not all coming-of-age protagonists are as for-
tunate as Huck Finn, though. For some, their
gender, race, and class serve as impediments to a
sense of freedom. As the feminist scholar Rachel


Blau DuPlessis observes, most 19th-century female
protagonists have two options presented before
them when coming of age: marriage, the socially
acceptable option for young women; or death, the
end result for those young women who deviate from
socially expected norms. Indeed, constraining one’s
identity to social norms and expectations is the
choice for one of 19th-century America’s most well-
known female protagonists, Jo March. In Alcott’s
Little Women, the creative and headstrong Jo winds
up married by the novel’s end.
Race and class also serve as factors in these nar-
ratives. The unnamed narrator of Ralph Ellison’s
invisibLe Man (1952) comes to realize his situa-
tion very early on in the novel. After the narrator, a
promising young African-American student, agrees
to show a white benefactor the poor living condi-
tions of sharecroppers living around the narrator’s
college, he is expelled from school and is forced
to decide between accepting society’s roles for an
African-American man or developing his own
identity. Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild features the
real-life story of Chris McCandless, a college gradu-
ate from a well-to-do East Coast family. When
McCandless realizes the limitations of the options
set before him—continued graduate studies, a posi-
tion in a well-paying job in the business world—he
renounces his previous materialistic life and sets off
on the roads of America in an attempt to discover
who he truly is.
National character is also an important factor in
coming-of-age narratives. Some preeminent Ameri-
can literature scholars, such as Leslie Fiedler, Ihab
Hassan, and R. W. B Lewis, have argued that the
coming-of-age narrative is one of the most domi-
nant narratives in American literature. For these
scholars, a sense of history, or lack thereof, is key to
their view of the importance of the coming-of-age
narrative in American literature. At the heart of
this contention is the argument that the American
national identity shares several key characteristics
with the coming-of-age narrative. The first of these
characteristics is Lewis’s argument that the Ameri-
can national character is primarily based on renewal
and innocence. His theory of the American Adam
states that American culture is constantly going
back to beginnings and new starts, an attempt to

14 coming of age

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