Should "Huck Finn" Be Banned in Schools for Its Use of the Forbidden N Word?

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Source: pnwlocalnews.com/south_king/ren/news/20746544.html

“Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” is considered an American classic and one of the first great American novels, and it’s taught in classrooms as such. But Mark Twain’s book has stirred controversy since its 1885 publication. Initially for its coarse nature. More recently for its colored description of the American South during the slavery years.

Calista Phair is one of the book’s more recent, and more persistent protesters.

A 2004 graduate of Renton High School, Phair recently requested that Renton School District remove the book from its supplemental reading list. Her grandmother Beatrice Clark made the same request in 2003, after she learned Phair’s 11th grade language-arts class was reading the book. (Phair excused herself from the reading.)

Renton School District’s instructional materials committee recently came to the same decision as in 2003: keep Huck Finn on the approved reading list.

Phair doesn’t agree with the decision. Further, she says the district and school board did not follow the correct legal procedures when reaching the decision and responding to her complaint. District spokesperson Randy Matheson says the district has followed correct legal procedures.

Phair’s response? A protest outside the Renton School District office. She and a handful of supporters brought their signs and their voices on that recent rainy day.

“Huck Finn must go!” they chanted. Their signs spelled why: “Nigger nigger out the door, don’t call us “niggers” anymore,” and “Racism in RSD” (Renton School District).

Phair and Clark object to Twain’s novel because of its use of the word “nigger,” which appears in the text more than 200 times. Huck Finn is a tale of two fugitives: a young boy and an older runaway slave and their adventures rafting down the Mississippi River.

District teachers choosing to teach the book discuss Twain’s use of the word with their classes. District staff also consulted the education director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Staff then created a guidebook helping teachers introduce the book.

But a flyer for Phair’s protest says the enhanced instruction is merely “niggerology.” Phair didn’t read Twain’s book with her 11th grade class. She read a different book instead. But she stayed in the classroom for the two-week long discussion before the book was read. As an African American student, Phair found the discussion degrading.

“I was beyond offended,” the now 21-year-old Phair says. “Basically we had a discussion for two weeks about the word nigger, the “N” word, and it was extensive — why the word is this way, why slaves acted certain ways. It was really offensive, really degrading. It kind of made me feel lesser of a person.”

Phair says one of her classmates also chose not to read Huck Finn. Matheson says he doesn’t know of any other complaints or refusals to read the book. District students can opt out of reading any assigned book.

Phair didn’t do much Huck Finn protesting between the district’s 2003 decision and her more recent complaint. But not for lack of interest. She’s been busy, enrolled at Bennett College, a historically black, women’s college in Greensboro, N.C.

“I still feel very passionate about the book,” Phair says. “I still feel that due to the fact I was in Renton School District, I did graduate, I was in the classroom, being told ‘It’s your history.’ I still think it should be out of school.”

Phair objected to the book in 2003, handing out flyers in the halls and landing herself in newspapers, on radio and TV. Still, it was her grandmother who made the formal request. Phair wanted her chance.

But district staff say Phair has yet to make a formal request. In order to do that, she has to orally present her case to the instructional materials committee, says district spokesperson Matheson.

Matheson says Phair has been invited to address the committee

during four separate meetings. Matheson says the committee finally voted to keep Huck Finn on the supplemental reading list after Phair’s repeated “no shows.”

Phair says she has received invitations to a couple meetings, but chose not to attend. She did not participate in the first phone meeting because she says committee members did not comply with her request to know the meeting’s location. She did not attend subsequent meetings because she says the committee held an illegal secret ballot vote. Phair appealed this vote to the school board. Matheson says the committee then set up a series of meetings for Phair. She says she didn’t come because the school board did not respond to her appeal, and to attend a meeting would be “repeating things.”

Matheson also says Phair’s family sent district staff a letter asking them to cease communication with the family. Phair says she doesn’t know anything about any such letter.

What she does know is she will continue to object to Huck Finn’s use in the classroom. She has no objections to the book’s inclusion in school libraries.

Neither do those who showed up at her recent protest. Attendees included Phair’s grandma Clark, her father Walter Phair, Rev. James Barnett of Martin Luther King Memorial Baptist Church in the Renton Highlands, Miss Pearl of the Black Action Network and Velma Stewart from Tacoma.

Stewart tried (unsuccessfully) to get Huck Finn out of Tacoma classrooms when her son was a student there.

Like Phair, Stewart and the other protest attendees object to the use of the word “nigger.”

“We’ve dedicated ourselves to the elimination of that word,” Rev. Barnett said at the protest. “We’ll do whatever we can to make sure the word is not celebrated — in any way — in poetry, literature, whatever.”

Clark says her views are described by Phair’s protest slogan: “In a book or in your face, the nigger word is a disgrace.”

“I believe in that,” Clark says. “It’s huge, too profound, too painful for us to allow Renton School District to use the word nigger, whether Mark Twain wrote the book or not.”

Many of Phair’s supporters say use of Huck Finn does not improve race relations.

“We don’t seem able to come up even though Barack Obama is the presidential nominee,” says Stewart, who is African-American

Lynda Hampton has a different view. The Hazen High School English Department chair has taught Huck Finn for more than 20 years, about 15 at Hazen.

She has heard only one objection to the book, while teaching in New Mexico. And the objection wasn’t from the student, but her parents. After Hampton talked with the parents, the student chose to read the book.

Hampton instructs all of Hazen’s 11th grade English teachers to teach Huck Finn. She calls the book “the first true American novel.”

Hampton disagrees with Phair’s request to remove the book from classrooms.

“A few trying to decide for many what they should or should not read is very disturbing,” she says.

Moreover, Hampton says the book is a reflection of the time in which it was written.

“I don’t see how anyone who is familiar with the time and history and Mark Twain would have objections to the book,” she says.

Hampton’s Huck Finn instruction includes a lengthy discussion of the word “nigger.” She says the discussion “enriches all the students. It helps them better understand each other.”

Phair is not through with her protests. She says she may even expand the protests to other school districts.

“I really don’t think any other African American should be subjected to the book,” she says.

But teachers like Hampton will not stop teaching the book without a fight.

“Absolutely, most emphatically,” Hampton says of her intention to continue teaching the book.

Renton Reporter Reporter Emily Garland can be reached at emily.garland@rentonreporter.com or 425-255-3484, ext. 5052.


Apparently there are quite a few people out there who believe that the novel "Huck Finn" ought to be prohibited from being used in English cirriculums for its use of the forbidden N word. What do you think?
 
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Source: pnwlocalnews.com/south_king/ren/news/20746544.html




Apparently there are quite a few people out there who believe that the novel "Huck Finn" ought to be prohibited from being used in English cirriculums for its use of the forbidden N word. What do you think?



i think that its political corectness gone mad personally, huck finn is not the only book to use the word NIGGER!!!

and besides why should we be affraid to say NIGGER when black people call themselves it every day
 
i think that its political corectness gone mad personally, huck finn is not the only book to use the word NIGGER!!!

and besides why should we be affraid to say NIGGER when black people call themselves it every day

Again. Political correctness is not an invention of the left. Books have been banned by conservatives for all sorts of reasons - sex being high on the list - for a long, long time.

You theory about the use of the N word is worthy of counterargument.
 
i think for a lot of black children,open discussion of the word nigger might be very embarrassing.
if you have a book that makes a significant proportion of the students uncomfortable there should certainly at least be a discussion about removing it.
 
So if a class that's primarily composed of Jewish kids feels uncomfortable after reading about Nazi horrors and the verbal and physical degradation of Jews in a Holocaust book, is there an argument to remove all holocaust books? An extreme example, but one that follows your basic premise. I think neither should be censored.
 
A friend of mine his son was reading this book at school and he felt very uncomfortable about the use of the word nigger. His dad wanted to talk over the matter with the teacher so he phoned the school. The teacher said to him I really do not see any offense in using the N word. My friend said to the teach if you do not see anything wrong with it, then why have you referred to it as the N word? Case closed.

I'm not a PC person and whilst having this conversation I was ready to fight for freedom of literature (which is important) but on him finishing the story I could only agree with him.
 
There's a big difference between using the N word in its historical and literary context and using it without a care. I don't support the latter, and hiding away from the former does nothing to address the problem. You're essentially giving more power to the word.
 
Ashura in the case I gave this kid was only black kid in his class and he felt uncomfortable in this situation. I do not believe that any kid should be made to feel uncomfortable in the class for any reason.

However, this could be a positive experience and kids could learn from it, I accept that. But it might be a bad experience and that should be avoided.
 
So if a class that's primarily composed of Jewish kids feels uncomfortable after reading about Nazi horrors and the verbal and physical degradation of Jews in a Holocaust book, is there an argument to remove all holocaust books? An extreme example, but one that follows your basic premise. I think neither should be censored.

i doubt it would be a problem in schools where they are in the majority as they wouldnt feel like they were being singled out.but certainly if they feel uncomfortable i see no problem with them voicing their concerns.
there is also the point that the subject matter needs to be appropriate for the age/group of people.
you wouldnt show a group of 8 year old jews a book which describes in great detail the suffering of their people,the women raped,the parents forced to choose between children,the operations without anaesthetic.in the same way if i was an english teacher i would hold an open discussion about the word nigger in a class with only one black child.
 
That's retarted. The characters were a product of the time, and their use of the n word should make people uncomfortable to some degree. What ever happened to our critical thinking skills that we should take everything we read as a guide to life.

It's not that it's OK because modern black people use the term, it's OK because we should learn about how things were.
 
kenworth said:
i doubt it would be a problem in schools where they are in the majority as they wouldnt feel like they were being singled out.but certainly if they feel uncomfortable i see no problem with them voicing their concerns.
there is also the point that the subject matter needs to be appropriate for the age/group of people.
you wouldnt show a group of 8 year old jews a book which describes in great detail the suffering of their people,the women raped,the parents forced to choose between children,the operations without anaesthetic.in the same way if i was an english teacher i would hold an open discussion about the word nigger in a class with only one black child.

No, of course not. But the student in this example is in the 11th grade, almost legally an adult. I think anytime in high school (I personally read Finn in freshman or sophmore year, can't remember which) is fine for this sort of exposure. If not then, then when? College, which is an education step that a lot of people either don't or can't take?
 
That's retarted. The characters were a product of the time, and their use of the n word should make people uncomfortable to some degree. What ever happened to our critical thinking skills that we should take everything we read as a guide to life.

It's not that it's OK because modern black people use the term, it's OK because we should learn about how things were.

retarded?
honestly you think that high school kids are going to go into english class looking for a guide to life?!

No, of course not. But the student in this example is in the 11th grade, almost legally an adult. I think anytime in high school (I personally read Finn in freshman or sophmore year, can't remember which) is fine for this sort of exposure. If not then, then when? College, which is an education step that a lot of people either don't or can't take?

this was mainly the fault of a very insensitive teacher.


anyway,its my opinion that nigger is a vulgar word.i would object if the word cunt etc were included in a book that was part of the curriculum too.
but i digress,the place for teaching history is history class.
 
retarded?
honestly you think that high school kids are going to go into english class looking for a guide to life?!

His point was that kids shouldn't look for a guide to life in everything they read, and I completely agree.

this was mainly the fault of a very insensitive teacher.

anyway,its my opinion that nigger is a vulgar word.i would object if the word cunt etc were included in a book that was part of the curriculum too.
but i digress,the place for teaching history is history class.

Historical fiction is a good place for it too.
 
His point was that kids shouldn't look for a guide to life in everything they read, and I completely agree.



Historical fiction is a good place for it too.

oh ok.,


for sensitive subjects it might be better to deal in facts rather than fiction.
it could be confusing that one of your home countries most revered authors uses racist terms aimed at you,no?
 
kenworth said:
it could be confusing that one of your home countries most revered authors uses racist terms aimed at you,no?

No. We're talking about high school kids, not elementary schoolers. I would be very disturbed if most of them couldn't distinguish between Twain trying to insult blacks and writing in a historical context.
 
No. We're talking about high school kids, not elementary schoolers. I would be very disturbed if most of them couldn't distinguish between Twain trying to insult blacks and writing in a historical context.

:eek:
prepare to be disturbed.
 
retarded?
honestly you think that high school kids are going to go into english class looking for a guide to life?!



this was mainly the fault of a very insensitive teacher.


anyway,its my opinion that nigger is a vulgar word.i would object if the word cunt etc were included in a book that was part of the curriculum too.
but i digress,the place for teaching history is history class.

Mostly not, however this one intellectually challenged girl seems to think that all books should be like the bible or something, presenting <gag> positive role models.
 
No. We're talking about high school kids, not elementary schoolers. I would be very disturbed if most of them couldn't distinguish between Twain trying to insult blacks and writing in a historical context.

That's true. I've know whites from the south that used the term, but didn't think it was insulting in any way, that's just what they called them.
 
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