Making Twain less dangerous
Jan. 4th, 2011 05:34 pmApparently, a new edition of Huckleberry Finn is being released, without that uncomfortable N word, or the I word.
Unsurprisingly, there are already those who are yelling “Censorship!” as well as others with thesauruses yelling “Bowdlerization!” and “Comstockery!”
Or, as Will Shetterly puts it, Huckleberry Finn is about a white boy learning what lies under words like "nigger" and "injun". Take those words away, and you gut its profoundly antiracist meaning.
Unsurprisingly, there are already those who are yelling “Censorship!” as well as others with thesauruses yelling “Bowdlerization!” and “Comstockery!”
Or, as Will Shetterly puts it, Huckleberry Finn is about a white boy learning what lies under words like "nigger" and "injun". Take those words away, and you gut its profoundly antiracist meaning.
no subject
Date: 2011-01-04 11:11 pm (UTC)I sort of half agree with that take on it.
The other sensible counterargument is: Look, it's either this or we can't teach it in school at all. Parents are what they are, we fought the battle, and we lost resoundingly.
That argument, yeah, I concede. I'd rather kids read a bowdlerized Finn than not read it at all, especially done in the spirit of trying to recontextualize based on an unforseen language shift, rather than trying to hide those dirty words from kids. And that really is the choice, censored or not at all. (Or at least, not before college.)
no subject
Date: 2011-01-05 04:43 pm (UTC)Not arguing against you, I understand your points, I just hate censorship.
intelligent discussion
Date: 2011-01-06 05:33 am (UTC)