Huckleberry Finn should not ban the adventure of Huckleberry Finn in American high school high school. This book is one of the most important components of American literature in today's libraries, leading the reader to the era of legitimate and accepted slavery and providing readers with a new perspective on slavery. Before a civil rights group proposes a better argument than the word "nigger" to create a "bad work environment" (Zwick), it is deleted from the reading list required by any high school in that country Should not.
I think Jordan should not feel something besides depriving anger and rights at Huckleberry Finn and most high school English courses. In most English courses, authors of ethnic minorities are too underestimated, and ethnic themes are usually only one book per year. I heard the meeting teachers excitedly referring to their new 'diversity book' as if they were checking the box and their work had ended. In my experience, sentences that promote diversity often require supporters of English-speaking departments, and as they leave, sentences they promote will be abolished. From the utilitarian point of view, this is a matter of effort and resources. Since there are few materials available for new books, teachers must do more to prepare course planning and assessment. By contrast, classical perennial favorites can provide whole units including scaffolding practice resources, assessment with answer keys, powerpoint presentations etc etc.
Mark Twain says that "Huckleberry Finn Adventure" is not always a book for children. Some of the recent commentators mentioned the problem of whether it is feasible to teach at school. Many high school teachers complain that black teenagers are extremely difficult to use the word "black people" in books. In the ABC TV program in 1985, John H. Wallace declared, "I think that this book is definitely the most racist book, many of which are published in the United States." When he sat in the classroom and had not read "this kind of filth", all the black students he said were shy and humiliating.