What
was expected to be a friendly and light-hearted skewering
of political and media elites at the White House
correspondents’ dinner by Larry Wilmore, comedian and
host of Comedy Central’s “The Nightly Show,” turned
into a night of off-color remarks, edgy jabs where you heard moans
and groans.
In
his closing remarks thanking Obama for his tenure as president
and the mark he has made in the world, Wilmore dropped the n-word.
And at that moment you heard audible gasps and saw visible
grimaces of shock, pain and embarrassment.
“When
I was a kid, I lived in a country where people couldn’t accept
a black quarterback,” Wilmore said. "Now think about that.
A black man was thought by his mere color not good enough to lead a
football team — and now, to live in your time, Mr. President,
when a black man can lead the entire free world.Words alone do me no
justice. So, Mr. President, if i’m going to keep it 100: Yo,
Barry, you did it, my n—-. You did it.”
When
Wilmore dropped the n-word twitter blew up. And what will probably
be debated for a while is whether Wimore went too far. Many of
the comments on twitter were asking is the n-word what the American
public need to hear associated to Obama’s last months in
office, especially given the racial roller coaster the entire
country has been on since Obama took office and evident by the
treatment of him.
Wilmore won’t
be the last African American comedian to use the epithet in public
discourse. But how it’s used means everything.
For
example, last year when news broke that President Obama used the
n-word during the podcast interview “WFT with Marc Maron”
about America’s racial history, it caused shock waves. We are
shocked because we are all confused as to when — if ever —
there is an appropriate context to use the word.
On
CNN, legal analyst Sunny Hostin said that Obama’s use of the
word was inappropriate because of his office, and given the history
of the word itself. New York Times columnist Charles Blow countered
Hostin’s assertion, pointing out that Obama used the word
correctly: as a teaching moment.
The
confusion illustrates what happens when an epithet like the n-word,
once hurled at African-Americans in this country and banned from
polite conversation, now has a broad-based cultural acceptance in our
society.
Many
African-Americans, and not just the hip-hop generation, say that
reclaiming the n-word serves as an act of group agency and as a form
of resistance against the dominate culture’s use of it. In
other words, only they have a license to use it.
However,
the notion that it is acceptable for African-Americans to use the
n-word with each other yet it is considered racist for others outside
the race to use it unquestionably sets up a double standard. And
because language is a public enterprise, the notion that one ethnic
group has property rights to the term is an absurdly narrow argument.
The fact that African-Americans have appropriated the n-word does not
negate our long history of self-hatred.
Unfortunately,
controversies seem to erupt regularly into public view. In July 2008,
the Rev. Jesse Jackson used the n-word to refer to Obama. Although
Jackson and a cadre of African-American leaders conducted a mock
funeral in 2007 for the n-word at the NAACP convention in Detroit,
the fact that it slipped so approvingly from his mouth illustrates
its lingering power.
In
January 2011, the kerfuffle concerning the n-word focused on Samuel
Langhorne Clemens, known as Mark Twain, in the NewSouth Books edition
of his 1885 classic, “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” In
the original edition of the book, the epithet is used 219 times. In a
combined effort to rekindle interest in this Twain classic and to
tamp down the flame and fury the use of the n-word engenders, Alan
Gribben — editor of the NewSouth Edition, and an English
professor at Auburn University in Alabama — replaced the n-word
with the word “slave.”
In
short, the n-word is firmly embedded in the lexicon of racist
language used to disparage African-Americans. Our culture’s
neorevisionist use of the n-word makes it even harder to purge the
sting of the word from the American psyche.
Why?
Because language is a representation of culture. Language reinscribes
and perpetuates ideas and assumptions about race, gender, and sexual
orientation that we consciously and unconsciously articulate in our
everyday conversations about ourselves and the rest of the world, and
consequently transmit generationaly.
Obama
used the n-word appropriately, as an illustration that racism is very
much alive. Wilmore used it as a term of endearment to say he can use
the word but no white person can. In truth, no one should.
Too
many of us keep the n-word alive. It also allows Americans to become
numb to the use and abuse of the power this racial epithet still
wields, thwarting the daily struggle that many of us undertake to try
to ameliorate race relations.
The
last thing Obama’s final roasting didn’t need to end on
is associating him with the n-word - even as an act of thanks and
brotherly love.
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