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The Book Banning Controversy

Published on Nov 18, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

THE BOOK BANNING CONTROVERSY

By Taylor Vollmer

REASONING

  • There are several different reasons over the years that people have banned the book
  • It started off because it wasn't proper English
  • Jim doesn't really talk good because he never had schooling

REASONING CONTINUED

  • Another reason was because Huck was not a good influence
  • Parents didn't want their kids to be influenced in a negative way
  • Huck was not raised in a good home so he never learned how bad everything he did was

REASONS CONTINUED

  • Most recently it is because of the use of the word nigger
  • It is used 219 times

SOLUTION

  • One publishing company changed every use of the word nigger to slave
  • Loses it's effectiveness
  • Not how twain wanted it

CONCORD LIBRARY

  • First library to ban the book
  • Placed it on the Index Expurgatorius
  • Wait it was unworthy for a place on its shelves
Photo by Teemu008

PROFESSOR SHELLY FISHER FISHKIN

  • "Part of Twain's genius in this book is letting the reader see things that Huck doesn't see,
  • making Huck an endearing and engaging but ultimately unreliable narrator…
  • The fact that Huck has a more limited view of Jim should not lead us to mistake that view for the author's."

PBS CULTURE SHOCK SIGHT

  • "To many, ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN is one of the world's greatest novels - and a national icon.
  • Twain's satirical attack on slavery, hypocrisy,
  • and prejudice in antebellum America compels readers to look not only at slavery and racism,
  • but also at the whole tradition of American democracy."
  • Yet "no American novel has been attacked by the public as long and as continuously as HUCK FINN."

NAACP

  • contained "racial slurs" and "belittling racial designations."
  • "most powerful racial epithet in the English language"
  • extensive use of the word "nigger" throughout the text.

PETER SALWEN

  • the action of the book takes place in the south twenty years before the Civil War, it would be amazing if they
  • Didn't use the word."
  • Twain is using this casual dialogue ironically
  • Twain "succeeded in making his readers feel a genuine respect for 'Jim"
Photo by cdrummbks

THE BOOK ITS SELF

  • The book was published in 1884
  • Published in more than 53 languages

CHANGES

  • Fifth most changed book in the 1990's in the US
  • The "n word" was the only thing changed out of the book

COURT CASE

  • A school in Tempe Arizona was used by parents over the book
  • That was twelve years ago
Photo by SalFalko

COURT CASE CONTINUED

  • The case went to federal appeals court
  • The parents lost

SCHOOLS

  • 4th most banned book in the USA
  • There are still schools banning this book

SCHOOLS CONTINUED

Photo by evmaiden

RANDOM PEOPLES THOUGHTS

  • If a parent has a problem with the book give them a different assignment
  • What's the point in teaching a book if it's banned from its original state
Photo by cdrummbks

RANDOM PEOPLES THOUGHTS CONTINUED

  • Not only is it a part of history, it was an attempt by an author to paint an accurate picture of the relationship
  • Between a slave and a non-slave in the pre-Civil war south
Photo by jondresner

RANDOM PEOPLES THOUGHTS CONT.

  • Twain didn’t like the n-word, but writing his book without it
  • would have been like telling people that the Disney version of Pocahontas
  • accurately portrays encounters between Native Americans and settlers.
Photo by zoe toseland

THOUGHTS CONTINUED

  • A 17-year-old is most likely to have heard the word somewhere else the book won't be the first exposure
  • Removing the book in high school isn't keeping kids from hearing it and it won't be in a better way
Photo by Dunechaser