Banning 'To Kill a Mockingbird' teaches students the wrong lesson

I was reminded of this thread as one of my best high school buddies, who happens to be black, wrote on Facebook today about To Kill A Mockingbird.


His first comment was "Wife and son trying to find a book to read and To Kill A Mockingbird comes up. F*ck that, nope."

He later said "They like sneaking these racist ass books with the great white savior in to our schools to f*ck with our black children's self esteem. Not on my watch."


Clearly the book makes my friend uncomfortable. Should it be required reading for his son?

I don't think anything should be required reading except to the extent the instructor decides that is what they will be reading. On the plus side, one of my english teachers posted a list of the top 20 banned books at the time, told us which ones we had to read for class, and gave everybody extra credit on the final for every one of the others we read on our own and wrote a report on. 10 got you out of the final.
 
Oh my gosh! To Kill A Mockingbird???? One of theeeeee best movies of all time. I still keep watching it on Netflix. Such valuable lessons throughout the entire movie...a classic! This is getting way out of hand. :(

If you ever learn how to read, you should try reading the book.

It's even better.
 
I was reminded of this thread as one of my best high school buddies, who happens to be black, wrote on Facebook today about To Kill A Mockingbird.


His first comment was "Wife and son trying to find a book to read and To Kill A Mockingbird comes up. F*ck that, nope."

He later said "They like sneaking these racist ass books with the great white savior in to our schools to f*ck with our black children's self esteem. Not on my watch."


Clearly the book makes my friend uncomfortable. Should it be required reading for his son?

No surprise that you'd have been buddies with such an ignorant douchebag.
 
A Mississippi school district in Biloxi has just pulled Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” from its middle school curriculum because .”“it makes people uncomfortable

This is hardly the first case of increasing sensitivity at schools. For instance, last year a district in Virginia removed classroom copies of “Mockingbird” as well as Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” when a parent complained.

Indeed, both “Huck Finn” and “Mockingbird” are among the most frequently challenged books in school curricula over the last decade or so. This is largely because both books use racial slurs.

The argument of those in favor of banning such titles is that to allow them validates these ugly words. But that’s both a misunderstanding of the books, and of how literature works.

es, both books do use hateful language, but in the service of a humane message. They have enough depth that their meaning can’t be summed up in a pat sentence or two, but they certainly aren’t racist works, and expose the hypocrisy behind bigotry.

They’re also powerful works, and entertaining enough that they’ve encouraged a lifelong love of reading in countless students.

Literature, at its best, can take you outside yourself. It allows you to experience things through the eyes of a person of a different age, a different gender, a different culture.

The people who run our educational system regularly talk about the value of diversity. Well this is diversity in its purest form. Every book lets you enter into a different world, and learn to see things from a different angle.

True, encountering how other people think can be a shock to the system, but it’s a helpful one. And if it may temporarily make some students feel uncomfortable, in the long term it empowers them.

First, it gives them useful historical information—this is how people spoke and acted in the past. But it leads to more than that. It leads to questions about why things were that way, how they’ve changed, and if they might change again before too long.

Meanwhile, banning the books not only takes away some great literature from students, but teaches them the wrong lesson. To fear mere words. They’ll be facing the real world soon enough. If they’re armed with the knowledge they can deal with painful or offensive concepts, they’ll be that much stronger.

By the way, the students don’t even need to agree with the books they read. In essays, or classroom discussion, they can explain how Harper Lee or Mark Twain got it wrong, or missed something. Reading is not a passive activity—it’s all part of a give-and-take the author, the reader and others engage in.

So books like “Mockingbird” and “Huck Finn,” if taught with sensitivity, open up dialogue about topics that mean something to students. And will continue meaning something to them as adults. In addition, give the students a little credit, they’re smart enough to understand tough words in the proper context, not to mention tough new ideas.

In any case, it certainly can’t be worse than what they’re already seeing every day in social media.
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2017...students-wrong-lesson-to-fear-mere-words.html

yes the southern crackas are very uncomfortable with the the book to kill a mockingbird, that shows southern racism, but not as uncomfortable as they will be in the future
 
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yes the southern crackas are very uncomfortable with the the book to kill a mockingbird, that shows southern racism, but not as uncomfortable as they will be in the future

So is this a case of politics makes strange bedfellows that southern crackas would not like the book and neither would strong black men?
 
All peoples of all races and genders have an equal right to be ignorant douchebags.

To assume otherwise would not be woke.

I don't disagree in any way that ignorant douchebags can come from all walks of life. What about my friends comments/beliefs do you feel make him an ignorant doucebag?
 
http://albumsleaksdownload.com/2017/10/biloxi-school-district-pulls-to-kill-a-mockingbird-from/

it seems COMPLIANTS were likely an excuse




A U.S. school district has made a decision to remove "To Kill a Mockingbird" from its junior-high reading list after "complaints" about the book's language. A member of the school board said that the decision to drop the book from the curriculum came from the district's administrators and not the board.

they are likely racists
 
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/superior



1
: situated higher up : upper
2
: of higher rank, quality, or importance
3
: courageously or serenely indifferent (as to something painful or disheartening)
4
a : greater in quantity or numbers escaped by superior speed
b : excellent of its kind : better her superior memory
5
: being a superscript
6
a of an animal structure : situated above or anterior or dorsal to another and especially a corresponding part a superior artery
b of a plant structure : situated above or near the top of another part: such as (1) of a calyx : attached to and apparently arising from the ovary (2) of an ovary : free from the calyx or other floral envelope
7
: more comprehensive a genus is superior to a species
8
: affecting or assuming an air of superiority : supercilious
— superiorly adverb
 
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