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The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn
Mark Twain
Should we change Huck Finn?
“A new edition of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, forthcoming from NewSouth Books in
mid-February, does more than unite the companion boy books in one
volume, as the author had intended. It does more even than restore
a passage from the Huckleberry Finn manuscript that first appeared
in Twain’s Life on the Mississippi and was subsequently cut from the
work upon publication.
“In a bold move compassionately advocated by Twain scholar
Dr. Alan Gribben and embraced by NewSouth, Mark Twain’s
Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn also replaces two
hurtful epithets that appear hundreds of times in the texts with less
offensive words, this intended to counter the “preemptive
censorship” that Dr. Gribben observes has caused these important
works of literature to fall off curriculum lists nationwide.
Should we change Huck Finn?
“In presenting his rationale for publication, eloquently
developed in the book’s introduction, Dr. Gribben discusses the
context of the racial slurs Twain used in these books. He also
remarks on the irony of the fact that use of such language has
caused Twain’s books to join the ranks of outdated literary classics
Twain once humorously defined as works “which people praise and
don’t read.”
“At NewSouth, we saw the value in an edition that would
help the works find new readers. If the publication sparks good
debate about how language impacts learning or about the nature
of censorship or the way in which racial slurs exercise their baneful
influence, then our mission in publishing this new edition of
Twain’s works will be more emphatically fulfilled.”
Was Mark Twain a Racist?
“Twain was a man who started out life as a natural, enculturated racist
and gradually grew out of it, or as out of it as his time and culture
permitted. Twain was the son of a slave owner, in a town of slave
owners. As a boy he saw his father administer beatings and floggings
and once saw a fellow townsman crush a slave’s head with an iron bar
…. As a child, young Clemens found the disemboweled body of a
murdered slave, and at fourteen he witnessed the lynching of a black
man accused of raping a white woman.”
He was even known to tell long jokes that were disparaging toward
African Americans.
“But by the 1800s Twain had changed; he made impassioned speeches
against race brutality, paid the Yale tuition of several black students,
became friends with Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington. In
short, his natural clearheadedness asserted itself on the issue of racial
equality, and it was out of this spirit that Huck Finn came.”
The Roger Ebert Controversy

http://twitter.com/ebertchicago/status/22676387810779136
Morris W. O’Kelly Responds
“Roger Ebert Misses the Boat”
“Twitter claims another victim. The chalk outline of film critic Roger Ebert
decorates the expanse of the information superhighway; a painful
reminder of the internet roadkill struck down by the speeding
blogosphere.
….
Proponents of the update have argued the original language was (among
other things) antiquated, inflammatory and inconsistent with the country
in which we live today. Opinions from opponents ranged from it being a
form of censorship to something borne out of sheer stupidity.
….
Ebert's argument fails because he blithely omits the inextricable link
between the two in this case. No slavery... no N-word. See how that
works? They explicitly reference one another.
The easy part is to simply criticize and lambaste Ebert for not knowing
his "editorial place," for commenting outside the bounds of his personal
knowledge or professional expertise. Ebert's history is clear -- he has
long celebrated African-Americans and culture, irrespective of him dating
African-American women such as Oprah or eventual wife Chaz. There will
be plenty of negativity directed Ebert's way for "getting too comfortable"
and commenting on that which he had no business commenting.
That's the easy part and easy way out.
The hard part is getting America to fall out of love with the idea that she
is a "post-racial" nation. We cannot and should not deny the history that
brought us to this moment in time in a political, social and even
economic disparity sense.
When we look at America's urban communities, its inferior education
system and the impenetrable cycles involved in both, "slave" and the Nword are not merely historical footnotes as to how African Americans are
treated in a contemporary sense. Don't let the discussion end with just
quips about Roger Ebert.”
Ebert Responds…
“Much Ado about the N-thing”
“My love of Huckleberry Finn is great. I would
sacrifice every video game in existence rather than lose
Mark Twain's novel. I've defended Huck Finn for years
against the tone-deaf Puritans who have banned it from
schools for its use of the N-Word. Anyone offended by the
use of that word the way it is used in Huckleberry Finn
cannot read and possibly cannot think.
The word is spoken by an illiterate 11-year-old runaway on the
Mississippi River of the mid-19th Century. He has been schooled by his
society to regard the runaway slave Jim as a Nigger and a thief. Jim's crime:
Stealing himself from his owner. Huck reasons his way out of ignorant racism
and into enlightenment and grace. He makes that journey far in advance of
many of his "educated" contemporaries. Part of reading the novel is learning
to be alert about how the N-Word is used in that process.
In an outbreak of mealy-minded Political Correctness, an edition
of Huckleberry Finn has now been published which meticulously replaces
the word nigger with the word slave. The argument is often put forward
that a young reader might be traumatized by finding a word in a 19th
century novel that he hears a hundred times a day. If I were that young
reader, I would be more disturbed by the notion that I was incapable of
learning how and why it was used. But then I am not that young reader,
as I was about to be reminded.”
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