One of my favorite novels is Huckleberry Finn. A copy of this letter appearing in the Chicago Tribune is tucked away in my copy.
Huck Finn editing regressive, insulting
January 07, 2011
Mark Twain scholar Alan Gribben promotes a new version of Huckleberry Finn, which removes the N-word, among others. To me this result raises the barriers attacked by Twain.
When I read The Life and Times of Frederick Douglas, one passage always stayed with me. After speaking to an abolitionist audience, Douglas considered the evening a great success, because he concluded his talk believing these people were convinced he was equally human with them. Those who saw the TV show Roots can remember the president of the black college being asked to sing by his benefactor to convince the woman she was with about how precious these people were because of their wonderful voices. Even the strongest supporters of blacks questioned whether they were as fully human as themselves.
Now comes Mark Twain in 1876, just a few years after the decline of the KKK, saying that even “poor white trash” like Huck Finn can figure out that “Nigger Jim” is just like him. Twain uses a precise choice of words to wash away the entire pretense built up from etiquette, education, wealth, etc., which people acquire to form opinions of themselves and others. Because of Twain’s extraordinary word picture, what remains on that raft is two people who can look directly into each others’ eyes.
In his final indictment, Twain, through Huck Finn, tells the reader that the accoutrements of civilization prevent one from being human and recognizing the humanity in others. I find that lesson timeless.
— Nolan Nelson, Eugene, Ore.
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