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Saturday, January 08, 2011

Furore over 'censored' edition of Huckleberry Finn



From The BBC


6 January 2011


A new edition of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is causing controversy because of the removal of a racially offensive word. Twain scholar Alan Gribben says the use of the word "nigger" had prompted many US schools to stop teaching the classic. In his edition, Professor Gribben replaces the word with "slave" and also changes "injun" to "Indian". But the publisher says hundreds of people have complained about the edits. First published in 1884, Huckleberry Finn is considered one of the great American novels. While telling the story of a boy's journey down the Mississippi River some time between 1835 and 1845, the novel satirises Southern attitudes on race and slavery. "The book is an anti-racist book and to change the language changes the power of the book," said Cindy Lovell, executive director of The Mark Twain Boyhood Home and Museum in Hannibal, Missouri. "He wrote to make us squirm and to poke us with a sharp stick. That was the purpose," she told Reuters news agency. The novel has often been criticised for its language and characterisations and it is reported to be the fourth most banned book in US schools. The "N-word" appears 219 times in the story.

Professor Gribben, who teaches English at Auburn University in Alabama, said he had given many public readings of Twain's books - and that when he replaced the word with "slave", audiences were more comfortable. He said he wanted more people, especially younger people, to be encouraged to read the novel. "It's such a shame that one word should be a barrier between a marvellous reading experience and a lot of readers," he said. But the idea has been condemned by other scholars, teachers, writers and rights activists. "Trying to erase the word from our culture is profoundly, profoundly wrong," said Randall Kennedy, a Harvard Law School professor. Dr Sarah Churchwell, a lecturer on American literature, told the BBC that it made a mockery of the story. "It's about a boy growing up a racist in a racist society who learns to reject that racism, and it makes no sense if the book isn't racist," she told BBC World Service's Newshour programme. "You can't make the history of racism in America go away."


Mark Twain did not take kindly to editing He is quoted as saying that "the difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter". And when a printer made punctuation changes to A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, Twain wrote later that he had "given orders for the typesetter to be shot without giving him time to pray". The publisher of this new edition of Huckleberry Finn, New South Books, says dozens of people have telephoned to complain and hundreds have sent e-mails. The press have also weighed in to the debate, generally in defence of the original version. "What makes Huckleberry Finn so important in American literature isn't just the story, it's the richness, the detail, the unprecedented accuracy of its spoken language," the New York Times said in an editorial. "There is no way to 'clean up' Twain without doing irreparable harm to the truth of his work." In the UK, an editorial in The Times called the new edition "a well-intentioned act of cultural vandalism and obscurantism that constricts rather than expands the life of the mind". The sanitised version will be published on 15 February, in a joint reissue with The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, which also has the offensive epithets replaced.


[How very Orwellian – editing the past to make it more ‘palatable’ to the present. Not only does this destroy a recognised classic work of literature it apparently defeats the whole object of the book itself, which was to raise people’s consciousness about racism. This editorial vandalism merely shoots itself in the foot. How deliciously ironic is that? I suppose that the next step will be to edit out of existence particularly offensive fictional characters that supposedly prevent people from reading classic books. After that I’m guessing that it’s but a short step to editing objectionable events out of history itself. When you ‘edit’ the past you destroy the past. After that happens we have no past to anchor ourselves to and measure ourselves against. We would be forever afloat in the eternal present without any sense of time or history. Of course I’m sure that some sections of society would love that to be the case, but it is not the way things should be. The past is always open to new interpretation but should never be airbrushed for our convenience and to spare our blushes. Such an idea, not matter how seemingly attractive at first sight, is counter-productive, stupid and dangerous.]

6 comments:

Sadie Lou said...

You know, at first I was really fired up about this but upon further inspection, nobody seems to be okay with the editing-nobody really important anyway...
~S

CyberKitten said...

It's the principle of the thing....

Stephen said...

I understand the professor's motives, but editing the book in this way does destroy its entire point. It's as if we were showing a documentary on war in hopes of convincing people not to do it, but we took out all the unpleasantness -- the gore, the bombed-out houses, the paralyzed veterans -- so as not to 'diminish the viewing experience'.

VV said...

I'm against the editing. I do believe part of what makes this such a great book, is that you can get a feel for the time period through its language, take that out, and you're not really connecting to that racist time. I always have to remind my students before I show or discuss something particularly unpleasant in history class, that I'm not giving them a Disney version of events. Some things are horrible, sometimes the U.S. does unspeakable things, but its the act of "we" as a nation, overcoming those horrible things, rising above them and becoming a better nation that is important. You can't understand how far we've come without seeing the past clearly and accurately.

CyberKitten said...

sc said: editing the book in this way does destroy its entire point.

Indeed.

sc said: It's as if we were showing a documentary on war in hopes of convincing people not to do it, but we took out all the unpleasantness...

Which we do too much of I think. If we showed war as it really is (or at least more realistically) I suspect that people would be less likely to engage in that questionable activity.

v v said: I always have to remind my students before I show or discuss something particularly unpleasant in history class, that I'm not giving them a Disney version of events.

Disney has a lot to answer for I feel... [grin]

v v said: You can't understand how far we've come without seeing the past clearly and accurately.

*Exactly*. Without a true knowledge of the past we cannot know how we got here - and the struggles we had doing so - nor can we gauge any progress we've made along the way. Editing the past is a fools game.

dbackdad said...

The book isn't racist. The dialogue accurately represents the vernacular of the time ... a racist time. I'm not even sure who would think it was appropriate to edit this out. Speaking for your average liberal, I don't understand what they are thinking.