According to Publishers Weekly, a new edition of the Mark Twain classic Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is coming out which will be sanitized to remove the "n word" and other words that today's readers no longer have the intelligence to handle in their historical context.
http://shelf-life.ew.com/2011/01/03/huckleberry-finn-n-word-censor-edit
It's a slippery slope. Up until 20 years ago "crippled" was a perfectly acceptable word. So was "deaf". No longer. And here in Canada you get frowned at if you use the word "Indian" to refer to anyone who isn't from southern Asia. Where will it stop?
And although this article doesn't go into this aspect, you can bet this sort of revisionism will be far easier in the e-book era. Orwell was spot on; he was just 25 years out on the date.
I just wish people would leave history the f--k alone.
Alex
http://shelf-life.ew.com/2011/01/03/huckleberry-finn-n-word-censor-edit
It's a slippery slope. Up until 20 years ago "crippled" was a perfectly acceptable word. So was "deaf". No longer. And here in Canada you get frowned at if you use the word "Indian" to refer to anyone who isn't from southern Asia. Where will it stop?
And although this article doesn't go into this aspect, you can bet this sort of revisionism will be far easier in the e-book era. Orwell was spot on; he was just 25 years out on the date.
I just wish people would leave history the f--k alone.
Alex