This Web Accessibility icon serves as a link to download eSSENTIAL Accessibility assistive technology software for individuals with physical disabilities.

FEATURES













Cornel West Vs. Michael Eric Dyson: N-Word Debate Resurfaces
By Eric Hinton - Aug 22, 2007
Photo

The NAACP "buried" it. New York City banned it. But the N-word continues to resurface in ongoing debates, this time pitting two noted black scholars on opposite ends of the contentious debate.

 

Princeton's Cornel West and Georgetown University's Michael Eric Dyson deliberate on the place of the N-word in American culture, and whether you can truly bury words, on West's second hip-hop CD "Never Forget: A Journey of Revelations."

"You see, we need a renaissance of self-respect, a renewal of self-regard. And the term itself has been associated with such abuse," West said in an interview. "It associates black people with being inferior, subhuman and subordinate. So we ought to have a moratorium on the term. We ought not to use the term at all."

West teaches religion and African-American studies at Princeton.

In a recent interview with Diverse Issues in Higher Education, West said he wanted the CD to help "the older generation raise their voices and listen to the younger generation so that there can be an internal dialogue between the two generations."

But during a recent radio interview, Dyson has argued that words, particularly those with a dishonorable history like the N-word, refuse to be buried for long.

 

"I think the Holy Ghost of rhetorical fire will insist that the N-word not be buried. I don't think you can bury words," Dyson said. "I think the more you try to dismiss them, the more power you give to them, the more circulation they have. I think that there are many more issues that the NAACP should be focused on: structural inequality, social injustice, this war in Iraq, the imperial presidency, which has subverted the democracy of the country."

 

From Michael Richards' tirade to Don Imus' "nappy-head hos" comment, the use of socially unacceptable language has come under increasing scrutiny the last several months. Rappers who have used the word liberally on their recordings have come under criticism as the subject prompted DiversityInc readers to speak out.

 

Whether the word will ever permanently be banished from the public lexicon remains to be seen, but there's a groundswell of support urging its abolition. Students at the historically black Bowie State University banished the word from two dorms and charges those who use it with fines. The publisher of Ebony and Jet ordered writers late last year to stop using the word. The town of Brazoria, Texas, tried unsuccessfully to pass an ordinance leveling $500 fines for uttering the word.

 

More The N-Word >>

Readers' Comments

Your opinions and thoughts...
Posted Saturday May 2, 2009 by Guest;
A rose by any other name is just as sweet. Today, rather than using the N word, some people are using the word Bama to denote the same thing. What's the difference?Going back some decades now, the NAACP used it's influence to ban Amos and Andy from the air waves, but in recent years the NAACP has given image awards to "artists" who call Black women bitches and 'hos.Compared with many of todays Black artists and programs, Amos and Andy had many redeeming values. And, notwithstanding splitting verbs and speaking with thick tongues, Amos and Andy was much more wholesome entertainment than some of the artists that the NAACP has sucked up to in recent years.Amos and Andy didn't use the N word; they had clean homes with dining rooms and tables set with china and silver; there was a keen sense of fraternity among Black people; and they always treated women with respect.I join those who believe the NAACP has bigger fish to fry than the N word. But if they are going to stick to small fish, I'd like to see the NAACP admit its role in working with J.Edgar Hoover to get Marcus Garvey railroaded on mail fraud charges. Not only should they admit the NAACP role in bringing down Garvey, they ought to take the lead in getting Hoover's name removed from the FBI Headquarters in Washington..

Comment on this article   
Name:
E-mail Address:
Comments:*


Career Search


Quick Search Advanced Search