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Six letters that provoke

The N Word Who Can Say It, Who Shouldn't, and Why Jabari Asim Houghton Mifflin: 278 pp., $26

April 01, 2007|Erin Aubry Kaplan | Erin Aubry Kaplan is a contributing editor to The Times' Opinion pages.

WHAT'S in a word? When it comes to "nigger," the better question is, what isn't? Whatever one thinks of its usage, the granddaddy of ethnic slurs is much more than a stick or stone that can be deflected with self-esteem and forgotten until the next encounter. The word is not singular and never has been. It is a social orientation, a state of mind so deeply embedded in the collective American unconscious -- and the conscious -- it's not perceived as a problem; it's part of who we are. It is a 400-year-old storm front that has never blown over, a forked tongue of lightning that can crash overhead without warning or welcome, breaking the fragile continuum of American conversations about race. And for all its obvious negatives, its more controversial appearances serve a useful purpose: to illuminate with sudden, unsparing fluorescence the racial divide on which America stands but is ever ambiguous about acknowledging. In every generation, this word speaks -- sharply and loudly -- to the multitude of our remaining sins.

Even the modern pervasiveness of the word via hip-hop and hard-core rap has not settled the protean question -- indeed, it has only made it larger. African American artists, scholars, activists, comedians and thinkers have all argued in favor of the n-word's respectability, or at least its viability, and they have failed; those in the opposition who have argued its cultural irrelevance have failed too. The irresolution was driven home to me last year when I was listening to a radio debate among a group of black nationalists who were responding to Michael Richards' now-infamous rant at the Comedy Store. The group was politically progressive and radically Afrocentric, yet it could not agree on what should be done with the word "nigger," whether to treat it as poisonous or empowering.

It is this kind of existential deadlock that Jabari Asim seeks to break in "The N Word: Who Can Say It, Who Shouldn't, and Why." Despite the title, this is not a prescriptive -- Asim is too smart and has seen too much for that. It is instead a sharp-eyed musing on the history of the word and how it bears, or should bear, on a media-driven culture that is dangerously ahistorical, especially in matters of race. The book is also personal, which makes sense given that Asim (who writes an online column on social and cultural issues for the Washington Post, where he is deputy book editor) is a black man who has had his own encounters with the n-word. The personal, though, is not necessarily a given -- Randall Kennedy's 2002 book "Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word" was purely academic and came from a legal standpoint, whereas Asim approaches it with the wide-ranging gusto of a cultural critic. The even tone of Kennedy's book suggests that such a charged topic is best served by rational disquisition, but Asim's rejection of a neutral voice suggests the opposite -- that neutrality is impossible, especially for blacks.

This is not to say that "The N Word" is a rant. Asim collects a wide array of facts and significant moments from American history, politics, science, entertainment and literature to marshal his impassioned argument that this word means black folks no good, and never has. Most Americans would agree with that, though few realize the extent to which whites went to keep the social order in place. Asim points out that in the 19th century, for example, "niggerology" was a legitimate field of study rooted in Darwinism that proved the inferiority of the African; its views were supported by Thomas Jefferson and John C. Calhoun. Abolitionists were antislavery but not by any means pro-black. The Great Emancipator himself, Abraham Lincoln, wanted to route blacks back to Africa after the Civil War ended. Lincoln's 20th century counterpart, Lyndon Johnson, used the word freely and once browbeat his black valet for aspiring to a higher profession.

Today, nobody uses the word in polite company. Yet, as Asim shows us, the ethos has been institutionalized and commercialized to an alarming and perhaps irreversible degree. This is what Bill Cosby was getting at with his 2004 speech, on the 50th anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education, that certain blacks were not valuing education and speaking standard English. This was not about class, as the media assumed, but aesthetics and character in the context of color. And, by the way, the n-word goes by other names -- gangsta, thug, skeezer, ho or (Cosby's choice) these people. None stings like the original, but make no mistake, it is the original they mean.

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