This is fair warning. As a famous oversized rapper once said, “it’s about to get ugly.”
It’s 2009 and the controversy lives on – the proper or improper use of a certain word. Who will be “allowed” to use the N-word and who won’t? The simplistic argument usually goes like this –“Why is it okay for Black rappers and comedians to use the N-Word and not okay for White people to say it?” “C’mon, it’s just a word. What difference does it make?”
But let’s be real. Everyone, even the densest of commentators suspects why the word is not for use in polite conversation. It has a complex history and despite all attempts to change it from an incredible ugly insult to a common everyday descriptive has failed. The word is a nexus for a number of sensitive issues – censorship, American history, power, and much more. It embodies issues that many Americans don’t ever want to think about, let alone talk over or deal with.
Well, if we can’t use it in conversation, how about the appearance of the N-word in comic books? Surely there couldn’t be a problem with the use of racial pejoratives in this fun filled, happy medium? Well, not exactly. READ MORE...
You may wonder how things were done in the so-called innocent, white bread, and censor-prone days of yore. You’d be surprised. In the 1940s, a series of comic books was created to encourage young people to read classic literature. Back then, maintaining the integrity of the original work, albeit with the added incentive of graphic images, was considered important by both publishers and educators. Classic Illustrated Comics didn’t flinch to use the historically accurate N-Word. The works of Samuel Clements -- Huckleberry Finn, Tom Sawyer, Pudd’Nhead Wilson -- all still proudly carried the currently denounced word. Even the “Narrative of Fredrick Douglass” and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” didn’t expunge it. And while these comics are still available and the original tomes are required reading in schools and colleges across the country, the appearance of the N-Word in contemporary classrooms is not always tolerated without heated debate or the very real threat of censorship.
Back in the wild and radical 1960s and 70s, there emerged a new crop of young radical artists and writers. They seemed hell-bent on being as controversial, edgy, and offensive as possible Even in the heyday of underground comics, the N-word was rarely used. Apparently there was line that even the most rabid revisionist wouldn’t cross.
In 1997, Acclaim Comics’ great but under-appreciated series, Quantum and Woody, tried a unique approach to the N-word. They featured a story in issue #4 where the N-word was replaced with the word “noogie.” It expertly made fun of the controversy and is one of the funniest comic stories I ever read, but hey, I have a sense of humor. If you get a chance, pick up a copy of this issue – it still holds up.
But enough talk of the distant past. How do current comic books really fair in this race to control what we say, think and print? A few years back Marvel Comics’ reinvented title, Black Panther, weathered an appearance of the expression, “work like an N-word” (used by a white character, mind you) even though there were a storm of angry letters and much public debate. Four years ago their Max Comics line showcased the word, in their Supreme Power: Nighthawk book (about a very severe Black vigilante super guy) albeit as racist graffiti. In 2007 the Black character Barracuda, the character in The Punisher Presents: Barracuda use the supposedly least offensive version (“nigga”) to open and close the first issue. I guess I should also mention that Barracuda is not exactly a role model for anyone with his use of all kinds of obscene language, gratuitous violence, and public urination.
The popular current series Loveless by Vertigo (DC Comics’ “adult” line) is about the fictional lives of Americans just after the Civil War. This historically accurate comic book uses the N-word in its narrative regularly. It seems despite any number of censorship watchdogs that at least one main stream comic publisher is resisting the current trend to re-write history, even as fiction.
As an artist, a historian, and an educator I see this discussion, heated or otherwise, as something that must take place. And while I don’t see it being resolved anytime in the near future, current presidential race notwithstanding, we have to have it. We need a measured, in-depth, all parties listening and thinking creatively discussion. I understand parents (Black and White) making choices about how they want the N-word used or not around their children. But I also think that wishing it away is a bit unrealistic as well. Talking about the N-word does not make you racist, but not talking about it could well keep you ignorant.
Now if you find you have an appetite for more, I recommend you check out a segment on YouTube that has been widely traded around the internet. It features Motown Maven William “Smokey” Robinson giving his own eloquent response to words that are used to negatively describe Black people. Comics, conversation or whatever, I don’t think anyone could have done a better job.
And the struggle for control of our thoughts and language continues.
A couple of years ago I was reading an X-men book and a black guy asked Kitty Pryde if she was a "mutie" and she asked him if he were a "nigger" and he said something like "hush your mouth girl". nigger is only not offensive when a black person says it to another black person in this case it is only stupid or crass but when i hear other groups use it, it still sends a chill up my spine.
Wow. Darkness USA, you really sum it up. To state to a free society that blacks can use the word when speaking to other blacks is SO racist. It's like saying a race owns a word, no one else is allowed to use it. So juvenile. Grow up. Perhaps if blacks just learned to shrug it off, the word loses it's power to insult. The fact that blacks are not able to do this, gives the word nigger a cult status in our society.
4 comments:
an interesting discourse. i doubt this issue will be resolved anytime soon. i'm not really all that concerned about it.
A couple of years ago I was reading an X-men book and a black guy asked Kitty Pryde if she was a "mutie" and she asked him if he were a "nigger" and he said something like "hush your mouth girl". nigger is only not offensive when a black person says it to another black person in this case it is only stupid or crass but when i hear other groups use it, it still sends a chill up my spine.
You'll be interested in this comic, then: http://www.comicmix.com/comic/comicmix/the-original-johnson/1/
Lots of historical usage of the word, and lots of history in context.
Wow. Darkness USA, you really sum it up. To state to a free society that blacks can use the word when speaking to other blacks is SO racist. It's like saying a race owns a word, no one else is allowed to use it. So juvenile. Grow up. Perhaps if blacks just learned to shrug it off, the word loses it's power to insult. The fact that blacks are not able to do this, gives the word nigger a cult status in our society.
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