![]() Kids & Race
• Kelly Rowland's proud of her record sales, which means she's not comparing herself to Beyonce. That's a good thing. [MSNBC] • More on racism in the Dominican Republic. Is a civil rights movement for Latino blacks on it's way? [NYP] • The N-Word writer and Washington Post columnist Jabari Asim has a new gig editing NAACP's magazine, The Crisis. [E&P] • In this presidential election, we're going to be on the voter equivalent of the all candidates' A-Lists. If they're smart. [PMV] |
![]() The N Word: Who Can Say It, Who Shouldn't, And Why
I'm not sure why it took Michael Richard's racist rant to re-visit an argument that that should have ended decades ago, but here we are. Arguing about the appropriateness of the word "nigger." In 2007. Obviously, Jabari Asim, an editor at the Washington Post, began writing The N Word long before KKKramer took the stage at that comedy club in LA. And the book came out before Don Imus's "Nappy Headed Hoes" remark opened up the racial slur floodgates. But how appropriate is it that that this book should appear now, what with the NYC government placing a moratorium on the word, the Detroit NAACP holding its funeral, and Al Sharpton marching around midtown Manhattan trying to get record execs to stop their artists from saying it? In The N Word, Asim uses the history of racism in the U.S. to prove his argument, which is that no one — black or white — should say a word loaded with so much hate. Exceptions to his rule include historians and, um, Dave Chappelle. It's not my favorite word, and I mainly use it when I'm quoting someone else, but I don't bat an eye when other black people say it. I'm not sure I agree with Asim that a word retains its meaning over hundreds of years despite the fact that black people who use it don't consider it negative. At the same time, I have trouble reconciling that fact with another one that's just as valid — "nigger" is still a racist's derogatory term of choice. CONTINUED » |