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A new edition of Mark Twain’s ‘Huckleberry Finn’ is being published in February, replacing the “n-word.” Instead the publisher, New South Books, uses the word “slave.” New South’s editor-in-chief told us that removing the racial slur isn’t censorship.
A new edition of Mark Twain’s “Huckleberry Finn” is being published in February, replacing the “n-word,” which shows up 219 times in the original edition. Instead the publisher, New South Books, uses the word “slave.” New South’s editor-in-chief, Randall Williams, told The Takeaway that removing the racial slur isn’t censorship.
However, in a society where kids encounter this word in so many different contexts, including pop-culture, among friends, and in the “real world” – does the move to edit Twain’s masterpiece make sense? David Wall Rice, an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at Morehouse College in Atlanta explores the complex situation.