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Uncomfortable 7th-grader spurs decision to drop 'Huck Finn' from class
PensacolaNewsJournal.com ^
| JANUARY 30, 2003
| Ginny Graybiel
Posted on 02/09/2003 6:10:14 PM PST by stainlessbanner
Edited on 05/07/2004 6:09:56 PM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
Escambia School District teachers won't be sharing "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" with students until they're in the 11th grade.
School District officials made the decision after the principal at Ransom Middle School relayed a parent's concern over a seventh- grade class reading the racially charged Mark Twain classic about the teenage Huck floating down the Mississippi River with the escaping slave, Jim.
(Excerpt) Read more at pensacolanewsjournal.com ...
TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: alangribben; auburnuniversity; blackkk; bookban; booknazi; huckfinn; huckleberryfinn; marktwain; pages; samclemens; samuelclemens; tomsawyer
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To: stainlessbanner
The bottom line was: There was one student who felt uncomfortable," said Principal Richard Harper. "Our feeling was: We're not here to make kids feel uncomfortable, and if he felt uncomfortable, then it was a problem." Meanwhile, a seminar on homosexual fisting is deemed appropriate for 14-year olds...
41
posted on
02/10/2003 6:10:29 AM PST
by
SauronOfMordor
(To see the ultimate evil, visit the Democrat Party)
To: Savage Beast
Few seventh graders will understand Huckleberry Finn. It's over the heads of many adults--maybe most.
If that's true the government indoctrination centers and parenting today, are even worse than I thought. Are you making a personal statement here? I don't know of anyone I'm aquainted with that this would exceed their understanding, young or old.
But then again, I don't suffer the company of fools.
42
posted on
02/10/2003 6:20:28 AM PST
by
BabsC
To: stainlessbanner
Superintendent Jim Paul said he learned about the Ransom incident Wednesday Irony abounds.
To: Rebelbase
Our teacher did that on Friday afternoons when we were in the Fifth Grade - complete with tongue in cheek when appropriate. It was our reward for working hard all week. How we loved it.
44
posted on
02/10/2003 6:48:24 AM PST
by
Let's Roll
(Whether we bring our enemies to justice, or bring justice to our enemies, justice will be done.)
To: BabsC
Most public presentations of Huck--movies, drawings, etc--describe a harmless, cute little boy with freckles. Huck is nothing like that; he is an epic hero. His truth is profound, subversive, and threatening, and he is bowlerized as a defense against it.
To: Doctor Raoul
"Grand Kleagle Robert Byrd could show up in session wearing his sheet and the Democrats wouldn't even boo him."LOL! Never underestimate the power of denial. They wouldn't even admit that he was wearing a sheet. They might even insist that the Republicans were. And millions would believe them!
To: stainlessbanner
"The bottom line was: There was one student who felt uncomfortable," said Principal Richard Harper. "Our feeling was: We're not here to make kids feel uncomfortable, and if he felt uncomfortable, then it was a problem." Actually, the bottom line is, you're not there to make children comfortable, you're supposedly there to give them an education. If your focus is on making kids comfortable, then there is your problem.
47
posted on
02/10/2003 7:33:32 AM PST
by
ncpastor
To: stainlessbanner
Honest-to-God true story:
I went to a local Baptist college and majored in literature. One of my classmates in an American lit class would NOT read Huck Finn because she said it promoted homosexuality.
The passage in question: Huck is wandering around onshore somewhere, and Jim asks him to "Come back to the raft, Huck honey."
48
posted on
02/10/2003 7:37:39 AM PST
by
Xenalyte
To: general_re; BabsC
"All right, then, I'll go to hell"
See post #25.
Thank you, general_re.
To: stainlessbanner
I don't think
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn should be taught to seventh graders.
Few of them will understand it, even if they have an expert teacher, and the chances of that are zilch.
Furthermore, Mark Twain's "dialect" is abominable, and children should not be exposed to this "Negro dialect", use of "the N-word", etc., presented as great literature (which the book is, dispite the "dialect") and without adequate guidance, which they are highly unlikely to receive.
Unless this book is explained adequately, it is likely to reinforce racial stereotyping. The subtleties of the bitter satire can easily escape the casual reader, and how many seventh graders--or high school students--are anything but casual readers.
I think it should be studied in college, maybe high school if the students and teachers are serious, but not to students any younger than that.
To: BabsC
"I don't know of anyone I'm aquainted with that this would exceed their understanding, young or old."Then either you are surrounded by geniuses, or you don't understand it yourself.
"But then again, I don't suffer the company of fools."
Maybe you don't recognize them.
To: ez; Guillermo
Yes, but the seventh grade is much too young to learn about Auschwitz. Maybe high school. At the college level, it must be a requirement.
To: Xenalyte
Hey, and don't forget: Huck dressed like a girl too! I guess you know what that means!
To: Savage Beast
I forgot ALL about the rampant transvestism. Okay, I'm convinced. Off the shelves with this piece of trash!
54
posted on
02/10/2003 8:19:49 AM PST
by
Xenalyte
To: stainlessbanner
The United States of America, home of the once free, and the comfortable.
How very PC that nobody is ever made uncomfortable except, of course, anybody on the political right.
To: Xenalyte
How can one read
anything if one is
that touchy?
(P.S. Then there was that unpleasant part about Jim discovering Pap. One could make a case for necrophilia.)
(I just can't take any more.)
To: Savage Beast
We need to stop now, before we can't find anything redeeming in it!
57
posted on
02/10/2003 8:33:13 AM PST
by
Xenalyte
To: Savage Beast
I think it should be studied in college, maybe high school if the students and teachers are serious, but not to students any younger than that. I know it's a crazy thought, but perhaps Twain wrote the book to be read, not studied
But perhaps to make everybody happy, it should be law that possession or reading of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn should be prohibited to anyone below the age of 18.
heh.. that should do it, they'll all read it then
To: ladylib
A teacher in one of these palaces of learning got into trouble for using the word "niggardly" recently. She should have. That word is horribly offensive to misers, especially those of Nordic descent. [/sarchasm]
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