Tom the Dancing Bug by Ruben Bolling for January 14, 2011
Transcript:
Tom the Dancing Bug by Ruben Bolling Classix Comix Presents: Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain Corrected to reflect modern sensibilities! Missouri, 1840 Huckleberry: Hello, Pap. How was the A.A. meeting? Father: Great. But my disease of alcoholism, caused by genetic and environmental factors, will be a daily struggle. Huckleberry: Pap, you know I prefer the term "alcohol dependency"! I'm offended, and I'm leaving! Huckleberry: Why, it's African-American Jim! Jim: Oh, hello, Huck. I was just doing some praying. Huckleberry: What are you doing, Jim? Jim: Well, as you know, I'm a Federalist, and many Southern states favor a states' rights approach. So I'm fleeing to the North. Huckleberry: Sounds reasonable. In fact, I'll help you. It's a good thing we found these life preservers and helmets. Rafting is a dangerous activity. Huckleberry: Well, if it isn't Joe "Who Happens To Be Native American, But Has Many Other Attributes"! I thought you died in the previous book, Tom Sawyer! Joe: No, didn't you read the Classix Comix TM "Corrected to Reflect Modern Sensibilities" version? I simply decided to go to college for a degree in Hotel Management! Huckleberry: Hey, let's just team up and fight injustice and offensive word-use across this great land! Jim: Boosh! Joe: Sweet! The End. STUDY QUESTIONS 1. What did the Mississippi River represent to Mark Twain? What about the life preserver and helmet? 2. If Huck were a millionaire gangsta rap star, how would he refer to Jim? 3. Do you think this version should have left the image of Muhammad in? 4. Why do you think there were no kikes, wops or beaners in the novel?
Kvasir42 Premium Member about 14 years ago
Love this! And the book club questions.
cptntombee about 14 years ago
Hear Hear Mr. Bolling. Great job pointing out that if such ideas gain traction where will it end.
doodlius about 14 years ago
Yes, question 4 was a stroke of genius.
Spyderred about 14 years ago
Considering that SC was notoriously anti-slavery, he used the N-word references to Jim to illuminate the manâs decency and longing for his family, and to strengthen Huckâs emotional choice when he helps Jim escape.
jpozenel about 14 years ago
Itâs funny, I just read the unabridged version of Huckleberry Finn a few weeks before this subject came up (really.)
Looks like Iâm going to have to re-read it. I missed the part with Muhammad!
Wm.A.Weasel about 14 years ago
This TTDB is pure genius. Chikuku, no, itâs not hypocritical (I refer to your 1st comment). As the comic points out, sensibilities change over time. We would not use the Iliad as the basis for a modern code of conduct, and we do not use the same language as Clemens did in the 19th century.
ickymungmung about 14 years ago
Interesting that a word still carries such power! What would it be in Esperanto?
hugh_jainus about 14 years ago
Reality check Chikudoo!
Itâs the libs who wanna censor books! Dude! Get a grip!
pbarnrob about 14 years ago
Uh-oh! Thereâs gonna be a fatwa on Dante! Oh, wait⊠too late!
Who had the latest book burning? Try the âreligiousâ Right!
Iâm a bit too melanin-deficient to use the âN-bombâ even with a close black friend. If he were a rapper instead of a bassist, he might feel comfortable using it. Heâs sure received plenty!
NoBrandName about 14 years ago
Nice try, hugh. Iâm a lib, and completely against this censorship. Now, think about who it is that constantly wants to burn booksâŠ
chassimmons Premium Member about 14 years ago
Itâs interesting that the silly censors have the slave state whites use the word âslaveâ when referring to one of them. Actually, in the old South, that word was rarely used when talking about a person. It might be used when talking about the institution, or perhaps in a law court. But when talking about a slave, rude folk would use the N-word; polite people would use âservantâ.
Banjo Evans about 14 years ago
@Chikuku there is a difference, but the audacity of the publishers to think that they should be allowed to change the authorâs words to spare someoneâs feelings is ludicrous.
Whatâs next? Changing the River Boats to hovercrafts?
Itâs a âgateway editâ and gives publishers to think they have the right to make changes to an authorâs work without his permission.
sfiller about 14 years ago
Bolling joins many, including the hero Leslie Fiedler, following Albert Bigelow Paine (1912 ) into the delusion that âJimâ has an EPITHET, that heâs like âPious Aeneasâ or âIngenious Odysseusâ or âMy Cidâ (âAfrican American Jimâ). The character Jim has no epithet; important to note, survives a century of delusion because, as you will see if you look at Chapter 2, heâs set apart as the big-souled artist, who, like âSamâ [eponym for the blackman, like âGeorge,â I hear, for Pullman Car Porter] Clemens in real life, commands a paying audience with the product of his imagination. Regarding âridden by witches,â see Richard Dorson, Negro Folk Tales, nineteen fifty something. I met a guy like Huck this morning, young, needing to say whatever the situation demands; I may misunderestimate him. Stuart